^'^^^^ 


*     JAN  24  1906      * 


BS    491    .N53    E9 

Nicoll,  W.  Robertson  1851 

1923, 
The  Expositor's  bible 


THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 


EDITED  BY  THE  REV. 

W.  ROBERTSON   NICOLL,  M.A.,  LL.D 

Editor  of  ''The  "Briiish  Weekly/'  Etc. 


COMPLETE   UNABRIDGED  EDITION 


NEW   YORK 
A.  C.  ARMSTRONG  AND  SON 

3   and    5  West   Eighteenth  Street 

I^ondon  :   Hodder  and  Stoughton 

1905 


COMPLETE  INDEX  TO 
THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

TOPICAL  ^ND  TEXTUAL 


BY 

S.  G.  AYRES,  B.D. 

Librarian  of  Drew    Theological  Seminary 


GENERAL  PREFACE  TO 

THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

BY  THE  EDITOR 
W.  ROBERTSON  NICOLL,  M.A.,  LL.D. 

TOGETHER  WITH  INTRODUCTIONS  TO  THE 

OLD      AND      NEW      TESTAMENT      SECTIONS 

By  W.   H.   BENNETT,  M.A.,  D.D. 

Professor  of  Old  Testament  Exegesis  at  New    College^   London 

And   WALTER    F.   ADENEY,  M.A. 
Professor  of  Neiv   Testament  Exegesis  at  Lancashire  College^  Manchester 


NEW  YORK 
A.  C.  ARMSTRONG  AND  SON 

3  and  5  West  Eighteenth  Street 

I,ondon  :  Hodder  and  Stoughton 

1905 


Copyright,    1905,   by 
A.   C.   ARMSTRONG  AND  SON 

[Pub/isheJ  May,  igos'\ 


GENERAL    PREFACE  TO  THE 
EXPOSITOR'S    BIBLE 


By   the   Editor, 
W.  ROBERTSON  NICOLL,  M.A.,  LL.D. 


The  Expositor's  Bible  has  been  pubHshed  in  a  period 
of  exceptionally  active  work  in  Biblical  criticism.  A 
survey  of  recent  study  in  the  Old  Testament  and  in  the 
New  by  very  competent  scholars  is  supplied  in  this 
volume.  I  confine  myself  to  general  considerations. 
Whatever  criticism  has  accomplished  or  has  not 
accomplished,  we  may  be  sure  that  the  supremacy  and 
the  finality  of  the  Bible  are  as  they  were,  and  will  con- 
tinue secure  and  unassailable.  The  ultimate  testimony 
that  the  Bible  is  the  Word  of  God  cannot  be  derived 
from  external  witness  or  from  a  process  of  reasoning. 
It  is  in  the  heart  of  the  believer  to  whom  the  voice  of 
God  is  personal,  and  it  is  given  by  the  Holy  Spirit  that 
still  bears  witness  in  and  with  the  Word.  It  is  and  has 
always  been  to  the  Church  not  a  matter  of  probable 
evidence,  but  one  of  Divine  certainty.  If  we  could  see 
the  living  Church !  It  would  be  much  to  see  the 
Church  Triumphant,  and  in  a  sense  that  privilege  is 
ours.  For  we  are  come  to  Mount  Zion  where  God  has 
set  His  King,  to  the  festal  host  and  Church  of  the  first- 
born which  are  written  in  Heaven.  Yet  a  hush  hangs 
over  the  everlasting  hills,  and  the  light  that  falls  on 
them  now  for  us  is  but  starlight  to  the  glory  that 
clothes  them.     But  what  if  we  could  see  the  living: 


6  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

in  Christ,  if  the  sheath  of  the  Church  Visible  should 
suddenly  fall  away  and  the  flower  of  the  Church  Invisi- 
ble should  unfold  itself  before  our  eyes.  Those  who 
have  heard  in  His  written  Word  the  true  voice  of  God 
are  the  Church  Invisible,  and  it  is  to  them  and  to  them 
only  that  the  conviction  of  its  Divine  riches  is  assured. 
But  even  for  them — and  in  these  days  this  is  specially 
true — there  are  difficulties  about  the  content,  the 
meaning,  and  the  form  of  Scripture.  Upon  these  there 
are  great  dififerences,  but  there  is  ground  on  which  we 
may  all  meet.  There  are  arguments  which  appeal  to 
every  Christian  heart  for  the  finality  of  the  Word  of 
God. 

We  are  in  the  first  place,  confronted  by  the  fact  of 
the  permanent  and  inextinguishable  Hfe  of  the  Bible. 
No  engrossment  of  the  general  mind  with  secularities, 
no  change  in  the  methods  of  thought,  no  discovery  of 
science,  and  no  achievement  of  literature  puts  the  Bible 
out  of  court.  It  and  it  alone  ministers  to  the  perma- 
nent and  universal  cravings  of  our  being.  Sir  Thomas 
Browne  puts  it  well :  "Men's  works  have  an  age  like 
themselves,  and  though  they  outlive  their  authors,  yet 
have  they  a  stint  and  period  to  their  duration.  This 
only  is  a  work  too  hard  for  the  teeth  of  time,  and 
cannot  perish  but  in  the  general  flames  when  all  things 
will  confess  their  ashes."  The  words  are  as  true  as 
when  they  were  written,  and  they  will  be  as  true  at  any 
future  period,  however  long  this  frame  of  things  may 
last.  We  will  not  even  quarrel  with  the  thought  that 
the  Bible  itself  will  come  to  be  no  longer  needed,  for 
we  shall  in  the  end  be  content  to  have  no  Scripture 
but  the  Living  Word  Himself.  Now  it  is  this  which 
sharply  distinguishes  the  Bible  from  every  other  book. 
There  are,  said  one,  three  classes  of  books.     There  is 


GENERAL  PREFACE  7 

the  book  you  read  once,  the  book  you  read  twice,  and 
the  book  you  read  every  year.  There  is  besides  the 
Book  which  you  read  constantly,  which  morning  by 
morning,  evening  by  evening,  brings  its  message  of 
help.  Other  books,  even  the  greatest,  exhaust  their 
message.  Take,  for  example,  the  sermons  of  Frederick 
Robertson.  What  startling  freshness  there  was  in 
them  on  a  first  reading!  Go  back  to  them  now,  and 
you  find  that  very  much  of  their  message  has  passed 
into  the  substance  of  contemporary  thought.  The 
Bible  has  been  and  ever  is  yielding  messages,  and  yet 
returning  to  it  you  ever  find,  and  the  generations  ever 
find,  that  it  has  more  to  say.  We  may,  indeed,  read  it 
heedlessly  and  find  it  old.  But  who  that  reads  it  with 
a  wistful  heart  will  ever  have  this  experience?  **I 
sometimes  look  back,"  said  one,  *'to  those  simple  days 
when  my  spiritual  life  was  commencing,  when  I  used 
to  go  forth  to  my  labours  with  the  New  Testament  in 
my  pocket,  that  I  might  glance  over  its  pages  at  the 
next  leisure  moment.  I  read  it  with  fresh,  unworn, 
unspeakable  interest.  It  was  like  Adam's  first  walk 
in  Paradise."  It  has  been  told  of  some  saints  whose 
minds  had  in  their  day  roamed  over  the  field  of  knowl- 
edge, that  as  life  drew  up  to  the  end  they  read  almost 
nothing  except  the  Bible,  feeling  every  time  that  they 
were  only  beginning  to  understand  it. 

The  significance  of  this  is  not  that  the  Bible  is  a 
great  achievement  of  literature,  not  that  it  is  the 
noblest  and  sublimest  of  all  books,  but  that  it  is  the 
final  revelation  of  God.  There  is  a  dangerous  form  of 
apologetics  which  aims  at  establishing  that  the  Bible 
is  the  most  remarkable  book  in  the  world.  That  parts 
of  the  Bible  are  of  the  noblest  literary  beauty  is  certain. 
That  some  at  least  of  the  human  authors  were  tran- 


8  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

scendently  gifted  is  equally  certain.  For  example,  this 
is  eminently  true  of  the  unknown  author  of  the  Book  of 
Job,  a  book  which,  as  Froude  says,  will  be  found  at  the 
last  to  tower  above  all  the  poetry  of  the  world.  It  is 
so  with  the  unknown  author  of  the  Epistle  to  the 
Hebrews,  who  has  been  truly  if  quaintly,  described 
as  "d.  man  of  the  first  intellectual  mark."  It  is  true  of 
St.  Paul,  whose  intellect  was  very  receptive,  that  even 
when  most  receptive,  most  powerful,  an  instrument,  an 
organon,  not  a  mere  speaking  trumpet.  For  St.  Paul 
the  glory  of  the  Cross  flooded  the  world,  smote  with 
death  its  principles  and  creeds,  created  new  scenery, 
new  horizons,  new  faiths,  new  understandings.  But 
we  cannot  affirm  all  this  about  every  author  of  the 
Bible  or  every  part  of  it,  and  we  need  not  do  so.  What 
we  say  is  that  this  book  and  this  book  only  contains 
all  we  know  of  God,  all  we  shall  know  till  the  veil  is 
rent.  Let  me  emphasize  this  assertion.  An  American 
poet  has  said : 

^'Slowly  the  Bible  of  the  race  is  writ, 
Each  age,  each  kindred,  adds  a  text  to  it." 

This  is  a  statement  that  we  meet  with  a  blank  denial. 
No  text  has  been  added  to  the  Bible.  No  revelation  of 
God  has  been  given  or  will  be  given  in  addition  to  that 
within  its  covers.  You  say  God  has  revealed  Himself 
by  His  skill  and  power  in  nature.  He  has  revealed 
Himself  by  His  providence  in  history.  He  has  revealed 
Himself  in  the  individual  life  of  believers.  He  has 
revealed  Himself  by  His  Spirit  to  His  Church.  He  has 
in  a  sense  inspired  the  books  of  devotion  that  are  the 
tre'asures  of  the  world.  The  Holy  Spirit  has  promised 
to  take  of  the  things  of  Christ  and  show  them  to  every 
believer.    Yes,  it  is  all  true.    But  what  has  God  said  in 


GENERAL  PREFACE  9 

nature,  in  Providence,  in  Christian  experience,  in 
Christian  Hterature  that  He  has  not  said  first  in  the 
Bible?  Take  the  most  beautiful  thought  ever  sug- 
gested by  the  profoundest  Christian  mind,  and  you 
will  find  it  quietly  folded  in  some  word  of  Jesus,  in 
some  argument  of  an  Apostle.  This  was  the  argument 
for  the  inspiration  of  the  Gospel  on  which  my  old 
teacher,  Dr.  Robertson  Smith,  was  specially  wont  to 
dwell.  "Wt  mean,"  he  said,  ''that  the  Bible  contains 
within  itself  a  perfect  picture  of  God's  gracious  rela- 
tions to  man,  and  that  we  have  no  need  to  go  outside 
of  the  Bible  history  to  know  anything  of  God  and  His 
saving  will  toward  us,  that  the  whole  growth  of  the 
true  religion' up  to  its  perfect  fulness  is  set  before  us  in 
the  record  of  God's  dealings  with  Israel,  culminating  in 
the  manifestation  of  Jesus  Christ.  History  has  not 
taught  us  that  there  is  anything  in  true  religion  to  add 
to  the  New  Testament.  We  still  stand  in  the  nine- 
teenth century  where  Christ  stood  in  the  first,  or  rather 
Christ  stands  as  high  above  us  as  He  did  above  His 
disciples,  the  perfect  Master,  the  supreme  Head  of  the 
fellowship  of  all  true  religion."  Even  so,  as  Christ 
stands,  and  forever  wnll  stand,  infinitely  above  us,  so 
does  the  Bible  stand,  and  ever  will  stand,  infinitely 
above  all  other  books.  Consider  what  this  claim  of 
finality  means  in  an  age  when  everything  is  changing, 
when  our  books  of  history,  science,  and  philosophy  last 
only  a  few  years.  Think  what  it  is  to  say  this  in  the 
face  of  the  lights  that  are  now  streaming  in  on  all  sides 
upon  the  human  soul.  Think  also  that  this  statement 
cannot  be  challenged  by  any  Christian.  No  Christian 
knows  anything  about  God  but  what  has  been  already 
written  in  the  Word  of  God.  The  experience  of  the 
saints  runs  with  these  words:    *T  had  little  thought  of 


10  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

its  Intellectual  grandeur  or  literary  beauty.  Christ 
was  there.  I  went  to  Him  for  life  and  found  it.  I  was 
baptized  and  absorbed  in  His  dying  love." 

But  the  question  may  be  raised,  has  been  raised,  Is 
it  right  to  describe  the  Bible  as  the  Word  of  God?  Is 
it  possible  to  vindicate  such  a  name  for  the  whole  Bible 
in  the  face  of  criticism  and  its  results?  Is  it  not  better  to 
say  that  the  Bible  contains  the  Word  of  God  ?  I  think  it 
is  possible  to  use  the  phrase  "Word  of  God"  in  a  sense 
that  is  not  justified.  But  the  phrase,  "the  Bible  is  the 
Word  of  God,"  expresses  a  truth  which  is  denied  in  the 
other  phrase,  "the  Bible  contains  the  Word  of  God." 
I  appeal  again  to  Dr.  Robertson  Smith,  whose  place 
among  Biblical  scholars  will  not  lightly  be  contested. 
He  says:  "People  now  say  that  the  Scripture  contains 
God's  Word,  when  they  mean  that  part  of  the  Bible  is 
the  Word  of  God  and  another  part  is  the  word  of  man. 
That  is  not  the  doctrine  of  our  churches,  which  hold 
that  the  substance  of  all  Scripture  is  God's  Word. 
What  is  not  part  of  the  record  of  God's  Word  is  no 
part  of  Scripture.  Only  we  must  distinguish  between 
the  record  and  the  Divine  communications  of  God's 
heart  and  will  which  the  record  conveys."  Defining 
his  position  still  further,  the  same  illustrious  scholar 
said:  "We  may  say  that  silver  is  contained  in  the 
mould  into  which  it  is  run.  If  the  silver  is  only  in  the 
leaden  ore,  the  man  who  has  no  means  of  smelting  is 
no  richer  by  having  it  in  his  possession.  If  the  Bible 
only  contains  the  Word  of  God  mixed  with  man's  word, 
like  silver  in  the  leaden  ore,  then  no  one  could  use 
Scripture  for  his  own  religious  life  who  did  not  possess 
the  requisite  scholarship,  as  in  the  other  case  the  man 
could  not  get  silver  withotit  having  a  smelting  to 
separate  it  from  the  leaden  ore.    Therefore  that  view  is 


GENERAL  PREFACE  11 

untenable.  But  there  Is  another  way  In  which  Scrip- 
ture may  contain  the  Word  of  God,  the  pure  Word  of 
God — as  the  mould  contains  the  silver  seven  times 
tried.  The  pure  silver  takes  the  shape  of  the  mould — 
it  may  be  an  Imperfect  shape — but  it  Is  pure  silver,  and 
the  man  Is  enriched  thereby  at  once  without  any 
further  act." 

Once  more,  when  Biblical  criticism  has  done  (its 
utmost,  when  every  one  of  its  established  results  is 
acknowledged  to  the  full,  there  is  still  a  problem. 
Grant  the  furthest  claim  of  the  critical  analysis. 
Divide  the  Bible  as  you  have  it  into  innumerable 
shreds,  painted  differently.  What  then?  You  have 
not  explained  the  living  combination.  How  were  these 
innumerable  scraps  brought  together  and  endowed 
with  this  indomitable  vitality?  It  is  the  same  problem 
as  Is  presented  in  Christianity.  The  parts,  as  an  apolo- 
gist has  said,  may  be  taken  to  pieces,  and  people  may 
persuade  themselves  that  without  Divine  Interposition 
they  can  account  for  all  the  facts.  ''Here  Is  something 
from  the  Jews,  something  from  the  Greeks,  an  element 
contributed  by  this  party,  another  by  that,  a  general 
coloring  by  people  who  held  partly  of  both.  You  may 
take  down  Christianity  in  this  way,  and  spread  it  over 
the  centuries.  But  when  the  operation  is  done  the 
living  whole  draws  Itself  together  again,  looks  you  in 
the  face,  reclaims  Its  scattered  parts  from  every  cen- 
tury back  to  the  first,  and  reasserts  itself  to  be  a  great 
burst  of  coherent  life  and  light  centring  in  Christ. 
Just  as  though  you  might  take  a  piece  of  living  tissue 
and  say,  here  is  only  so  much  nitrogen,  carbon,  lime, 
and  so  forth,  but  the  energetic  peculiarities  of  life 
going  on  before  your  eyes  would  refute  you  by  the 
palpable  presence  of  a  mystery  unaccounted  for."    So 


12  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

it  is  with  the  Bible.  How  were  these  elements  put 
together?  Who  breathed  into  the  whole  the  breath  of 
life  so  that  it  became  a  living  creature,  as  Luther  says. 
with  eyes  and  hands  and  feet?  Take  the  problem  of 
the  Gospels.  One  may  say  lazily  that  it  is  an  insoluble 
problem,  and  one  may  say  it  wisely.  In  any  case,  how 
was  it  that  these  writers  succeeded  in  drawing  the 
picture  of  the  Stainless?  How  was  it  that  the  stream 
was  never  allowed  to  become  turbid  at  any  moment? 
One  act,  one  word,  one  attitude  might  have  been  con- 
demned by  all  generations  of  the  faithful.  How  were 
they  kept  from  misunderstandings,  these  men  who 
were  always  misunderstanding,  when  the  story  came 
to  be  written?  An  artist  and  poet  of  great  note  died 
some  twenty  years  ago,  and  quite  a  number  of  his 
friends  have  put  on  record  their  impressions.  The 
most  intimate  of  these  friends  has  refrained.  He  has 
contented  himself  with  saying  that  they  have  all 
missed  the  true  man,  the  heroic,  the  noble  man.  Are 
we  not  in  the  presence  of  the  supernatural  in  dealing 
with  a  fact  like  this,  that  the  sinful  should  understand 
the  Sinless  so  perfectly  as  to  record  no  thought,  no 
deed,  no  word  which  bears  upon  it  the  mark  of  their 
human  frailty?  Shelley  said  once:  ''There  are  two 
Italys,  one  of  the  green  earth,  the  transparent  seas,  old 
ruins,  the  warm,  radiant  atmosphere ;  the  other  is  of 
the  Italians,  with  their  works  and  ways."  There  are 
two  Bibles,  the  Bible  cut  in  pieces  by  analysis,  the 
Bible  as  we  have  it.  The  time  will  come  when  one  will 
pass  into  the  other,  but  it  will  not  come  till  the  finality 
and  Divinity  of  the  Bible  are  confessed,  just  as  the 
moment  will  come  when  the  spell  of  Italy  will  pass 
into  the  soul  of  her  people,  and  the  contrast  will  fade 
away.    What  we  say  about  the  Bible,  when  admitting 


GENERAL  PREFACE  13 

everything  that  criticism  has  secured,  is  that  criticism 
has  only  made  it  clearer  than  ever  that  it  is  a  house 
not  made  with  hands. 

Once  more,  and  especially  of  the  Old  Testament,  we 
have  the  witness  of  Christ.  This  is  a  witness  which 
has  been  misunderstood  and  overdriven.  But  in  its 
essence  it  is  a  witness  which  is  admitted  by  believing 
critics  themselves  to  be  absolute.  To  us  it  is  not 
enough  to  say  that  Jesus  Christ  is  an  inspired  soul, 
obedient  to  the  laws  of  His  own  nature.  It  is  not 
enough  even  to  say  that  He  holds  a  regal  rank  among 
souls  and  an  exceptional  relation  to  God.  It  is  not 
enough  to  say  that  He  is  the  Saint  of  saints.  He  is 
more  than  that,  even  very  God  of  very  God.  But  take 
the  lower  position.  Admit  everything  that  can  be 
urged  in  the  circumstances  of  His  humanity,  and  still 
it  remains  true,  as  Dr.  Robertson  Smith  has  said  that 
"there  can  be  no  question  that  Jesus  Himself  believed 
that  God  dealt  with  Israel  in  the  way  of  special  revela- 
tion, that  the  Old  Testament  contains  within  itself  a 
perfect  picture  of  His  gracious  relations  to  His  people, 
and  sets  forth  the  whole  growth  of  the  true  religion 
up  to  its  perfect  fulness."  Dr.  Robertson  Smith  added  : 
*'We  cannot  depart  from  this  view  without  making 
Jesus  an  inperfect  teacher  and  an  imperfect  Saviour." 
Did  He  who  said,  ''No  man  knoweth  the  Father  but 
the  Son  and  he  to  whomsoever  the  Son  willeth  to  reveal 
Him,"  did  He  mistake  His  Father  for  another  in  the 
pages  of  the  Old  Testament?  It  is  incredible,  incredi- 
ble upon  any  theory  of  the  person  of  Christ  that  can  be 
held  by  Christians. 

''The  Spirit  of  God  maketh  the  reading,  and  espe- 
cially the  preaching,  of  the  Word  an  effectual  means  of 
convincing  and  converting  sinners,"  says  the  Shorter 


14  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

Catechism.  Is  It  so  certain  that  the  preaching  comes 
before  the  reading?  Human  words,  when  they  are 
best,  give  the  forms  of  what  truth  the  speakers  see,  but 
the  brightest  forms  have  neither  the  lustre  nor  the 
grace  of  the  forms  of  the  Spirit.  They  are  at  best  poor, 
dull,  inharmonious  echoes  of  the  heavenly  music,  and 
it  is  through  the  Word  of  the  Lord  pre-eminently  that 
the  power  of  the  Lord  must  spread  from  heart  to  heart. 
W.  ROBERTSON  NICOLL 
London,  April,  1905. 


GENERAL  INTRODUCTION  TO  THE 
EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 


OLD  TESTAMENT 


By  W.  H.  Bennett,  M.  A.,  D.  D. 

Professor  of  Old  Testament  Exegesis  at  New  College,  London 

I. PLAN    OF   THE   SERIES 

The  Expositor's  Bible  is  unique.  There  have  been 
innumerable  commentaries,  homiletical,  didactic,  exeget- 
ical,  and  critical;  mostly  dealing  with  the  books  text  by- 
text,  or  paragraph  by  paragraph.  This  series  adopts  a 
different  method.  It  aims  at  bringing  out  the  general 
teaching  of  each  book,  and  of  each  of  the  divisions  into 
which  the  book  naturally  falls.  The  reader  is  furnished 
with  all  the  information  necessary  to  enable  him  to 
understand  the  history,  philosophy,  and  theology,  the 
practical  wisdom  and  devotional  poetry  of  the  Sacred 
Scriptures;  but  his  mind  is  not  bewildered  by  abstruse 
technicalities,  and  his  attention  is  not  distracted  from  the 
main  issues  by  long  discussions  on  minor  details.  This 
plan  has,  of  course,  been  partially  anticipated,  there  have 
been  similar  expositions  of  books  or  portions  of  books; 
such  expositions  have  usually  been  sections  of  elaborate 
works ;  but  in  the  Expositor's  Bible  we  have  for  the  first 
time  a  series  exclusively  devoted  to  such  exposition,  and 
embracing  the  whole  Bible.  The  series  illustrates  the 
catholicity  of  scholarship;  its  contributors  represent  sev- 
eral Evangelical  churches,  and  various  schools  of  Biblical 
Criticism.  There  are  Anglicans  like  the  Bishop  of  Derry, 
Presbyterians  like  Prof.  G.  A.  Smith,  and  English  Free 
Churchmen  like  Dr.  Maclaren. 


16  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

II. — THE  NEED  FOR  A  NEW  EXPOSITION  OF  THE 
OLD    TESTAMENT 

*'Of  old  time  God  spake  unto  the  fathers  in  the 
prophets  by  divers  portions  and  in  divers  manners." ' 

In  the  Old  Testament  we  have  the  record  of  this  Reve- 
lation so  far  as  the  mind  could  grasp  the  Divine  utterance 
and  so  far  as  words  could  describe  the  Heavenly  Vision. 
Ever  since  the  Epistle  to  the  Hebrews  was  written,  and 
for  that  matter  even  earlier,  devout  Jews  and  Christians 
have  been  busy  with  the  interpretation  of  the  Scriptures 
of  the  Old  Covenant.  Not  only  so,  but  also  the  inspired 
words  of  prophets  and  psalmists,  sown  in  the  good  soil 
of  believing  hearts,  have  brought  forth  an  abundant  har- 
vest of  theological  and  devotional  literature.  The  Old 
Testament  and  the  literature  of  which  it  has  been  the 
occasion  form  an  important  portion  of  the  Christian 
inheritance. 

Each  new  generation  needs  to  take  stock  afresh  of  this 
sacred  legacy,  so  that  it  may  obtain  from  ancient  learning, 
study  and  inspiration  the  true  message  for  its  own  times. 
The  tares  must  be  gathered  out  from  the  wheat,  and  the 
chaff  separated  from  the  grain.  Truth,  too,  constantly 
needs  re-statement ;  language  and  ideas  are  always  chang- 
ing; words  and  phrases  do  not  convey  to  us  the  same 
meaning  as  they  did  to  our  grandfathers.  Religious 
teaching  deals  largely  in  metaphors,  and  a  metaphor  may 
be  a  guiding  light  to  one  generation,  and  a  will-o'-the-wisp 
to  the  next.  As  times  change,  aspects  of  the  truth  once 
prominent  may  be  passed  over  lightly,  and  new  views  of 
the  same  truth  must  be  emphasized  to  suit  the  needs  of  a 
new  dispensation.  The  church  in  its  age-long  pilgrimage 
ever  attains  new  heights  from  which  it  beholds  a  wider 
^Hebrews,  I.  I. 


INTRODUCTION  TO  OLD  TESTAMENT  17 

range  of  the  vast  expanse  of  sacred  trnth;  for  the  most 
part  it  is  the  same  landscape  which  was  seen  of  old ;  but 
something  is  lost  to  sight,  some  tracts  which  once  filled  the 
field  of  vision  have  become  dim  and  small ;  new  glories  are 
revealed,  and  the  true  relations  of  mountain,  valley,  and 
plain,  of  river,  lake,  and  sea  are  discerned  as  they  never 
w^ere  before.  Commentators  and  expositors  have  not 
merely  to  repeat  the  shibboleths  of  forgotten  controver- 
sies, they  have  the  more  onerous  task  of  making  the  new 
view  of  the  Heavenly  Vision  an  intelligible,  living,  speak- 
ing picture  for  the  men  and  women  of  their  day.  j 

At  the  time  when  the  publication  of  this  series  began 
there  was  urgent  need  for  a  new  exposition  of  the  Old 
Testament.  The  nineteenth  century  had  obtained  won- 
derful results  from  research  in  science  and  history,  and 
from  the  progress  of  thought  in  philosophy,  criticism, 
and  theology ;  men  were  dazzled  with  new  facts  and  new 
ideas.  How  were  they  to  understand  the  Bible  in  the 
light — one  might  almost  say  in  the  glare — of  this  new 
truth? 

The  scientific  researches  associated  with  the  names  of 
Wallace  and  Darwin,  and  with  the  term  Evolution,  have 
altogether  changed  our  ideas  of  Nature  and  man,  and  of 
their  relation  to  each  other.  Our  knowledge  of  the  his- 
tory of  the  race  is  fuller  and  deeper  than  it  was,  and  goes 
back  to  a  far  more  remote  antiquity.  Democracy  both  as 
an  idea  and  as  a  practical  system  is  affecting  thought,  feel- 
ing, and  character  as  it  never  did  before,  both  for  good 
and  evil.  This  latter  feature  is  perhaps  one  cause  of  the 
modern  tenderness  towards  acute  physical  pain,  and  this 
tenderness,  again,  has  done  much  to  modify  the  sterner 
doctrines  of  the  old  theology.  In  many  other  ways  too 
theology  has  become,  as  some  would  say,  more  vague ; 


18  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

or,  as  others  would  prefer  to  put  it,  more  elastic  and  better 
able  to  adapt  itself  to  the  varied  circumstances  of  life. 

We  may  now  turn  to  departments  of  research  specially 
connected  with  the  Old  Testament.  We  may  begin  with 
Egyptology  and  Assyriology,  it  being  understood  that  the 
latter  is  even  more  concerned  with  the  literature,  history, 
and  religion  of  Babylon  than  with  that  of  Assyria.  Dur- 
ing the  middle  of  the  nineteenth  century  the  excavations 
in  the  East  have  restored  its  buried  empires  to  the  light 
of  history ;  they  have  enabled  us  to  study  the  Sacred  story 
in  connection  with  the  great  international  system  of  Egypt 
and  Western  Asia;  and  they  have  shown  us  how  closely 
Israel  was  connected  with  the  peoples  of  the  Nile  and  the 
Euphrates  in  commerce,  politics,  and  religion.  But  the 
study  of  the  faith  and  worship  of  Israel  side  by  side  with 
those  of  Egypt  and  Babylon  is  only  part  of  the  science  of 
comparative  religion.  Recent  research  has  taught  us 
many  things  concerning  the  faiths  of  the  world;  and  the 
unique  character  of  the  Old  Testament  Revelation  can 
only  be  understood  when  it  is  compared  with  the  religious 
practices  and  ideas  of  other  peoples.  Moreover,  the  dis- 
coveries in  Egypt  and  Assyria,  and  the  study  of  Eastern 
life,  furnish  many  new  illustrations  of  the  manners  and 
customs  of  Israel ;  and  the  new  knowledge  of  Semitic  lan- 
guages enables  us  to  correct  many  defects  in  the  Author- 
ized Version  of  the  Old  Testament.  Indeed  the  publica- 
tion of  the  Revised  Version  clearly  demanded  a  revised 
exposition. 

Again,  the  new  exegesis  had  to  consider  results  in  other 
departments  of  study,  e.  g,,  the  Lower  and  the  Higher 
Criticism.  Something  had  been  done  in  the  Lower  Criti- 
cism, or  the  discussion  in  detail  of  the  text  of  the  Sacred 
Books;  but  here  the  changes  were  comparatively  unim- 


INTRODUCTION  TO  OLD  TESTAMENT  19 

portant;  and  even  now  our  knowledge  of  this  subject  is 
very  inadequate  from  the  point  of  view  of  scholarship, 
though  the  text  is  determined  with  an  accuracy  sufficient 
for  practical  purposes.  It  was  very  different,  however, 
in  what  is  known  as  the  Higher  Criticism,  i.  e.,  the  dis- 
cussion of  the  date,  authorship,  and  composition  of  the 
books  of  the  Old  Testament.  Higher  critics  of  one 
school,  following  those  of  former  generations,  were  in- 
clined, for  the  most  part,  to  assign  the  books  as  they  stood 
to  the  authors  whose  names  were  given  as  their  titles. 
For  instance  the  whole  of  the  Pentateuch,  with  the  excep- 
tion of  Deuteronomy,  xxxiv,  5-8,  was  ascribed  to  Moses ; 
the  whole  of  Isaiah  to  the  prophet  of  the  time  of  Heze- 
kiah;  and  all  the  Davidic  Psalms  to  David.  But  for 
about  a  century  this  subject  had  been  studied  from 
another  point  of  view,  by  a  school  of  critics  who  were 
inclined  to  neglect  tradition,  and  to  take  for  their  motto 
'Trove  all  things."  The  principles  of  this  school  are 
clearly  and  eloquently  set  forth  in  the  following  quotation 
from  Prof.  Sayce  f  the  passage  refers  to  the  sacred  books 
of  Babylonia,  but  the  principles  are  of  universal  appli- 
cation. 

"Before  we  can  understand  it  (a  collection  of  sacred 
books)  properly,  we  must  separate  the  elements  of 
which  it  consists^  and  assign  to  each  its  chronological 
position. 

''The  very  fact,  however,  that  religious  texts  are 
usually  of  immemorial  antiquity,  and  that  changes 
inevitably  pass  over  them  as  they  are  handed  down  in 
successive  editions,  makes  such  a  task  peculiarly  diffi- 
cult. Nevertheless  it  is  a  task  which  must  be  under- 
taken before  we  have  the  right  to  draw  a  conclusion 

^The  Religions  of  Ancient  Egypt  and  Babylonia,  p.  258. 


20  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

from  the  texts  with  which  we  deal.  We  must  first 
know  whether  .  .  .  they  are  composite  or  the 
products  of  a  single  author  and  epoch;  whether,  lastly, 
they  have  been  glossed  and  interpolated,  and  their 
primitive  meaning  transformed.  We  must  have  a 
chronology  for  our  documents  .  .  .  and  beware 
.  .  .  of  interpreting  the  creations  of  one  age  as  if 
they  were  the  creations  of  another." 

The  application  of  these  principles  to  the  Hebrew 
Scriptures  has  had  startling  results.  If  two  tables 
were  compiled  showing  the  date  and  authorship  of  the 
various  books,  one  according  to  the  traditional  school 
of  higher  criticism,"^  the  other  according  to  the  school 
with  which  we  are  now  dealing,^  the  two  would  present 
a  marked  contrast  to  each  other.  The  new  school 
would  hold,  for  instance,  that  the  bulk  of  the  Penta- 
teuch is  not  in  its  present  form  the  work  of  Aloses; 
that  the  last  twenty-seven  chapters  of  our  Book  of 
Isaiah  were  not  composed  by  that  prophet;  and  that 
very  few  of  the  Davidic  Psalms  were  really  written 
by  David.  At  the  time  when  the  first  volumes  of  the 
Expositor's  Bible  were  published  this  school  had  be- 
come large  and  influential;  and  public  attention  had 
been  called  to  their  teaching  by  the  attacks  on  Prof. 
W.  Robertson  Smith,  one  of  their  leading  representa- 
tives. The  new  criticism  affected  not  only  purely  lit- 
erary questions  but  also  the  views  to  be  taken  of  the 
history  and  religion  of  Israel.  The  history  before 
Saul,  it  was  maintained,  was  not  so  fully  and  definitely 
known  as  had  been  supposed ;  and  the  religion  of  Israel 
had  developed,  under  the  influence  of  Revelation,  from 


^As    represented    for    instance    by    the    earlier    editions    of    Dr.    Angus's 
Bible  Handbook,  or  by  Keil's  O.  T.  Introduction. 
^As   represented  by   Driver's    Introduction. 


INTRODUCTION  TO  OLD  TESTAMENT  21 

a  primitive  faith  which  had  much  in  common  with  that 
of  other  Semitic  peoples.  Here  again  we  can  illustrate 
the  alleged  results  of  the  new  criticism  by  a  passage 
from  Prof.  Sayce :  '*It  is  to  Babylonia,  therefore,  that 
we  must  look  for  the  origin  of  those  views  of  the  future 
world  and  of  the  punishment  of  sin^  which  have  left  so 
deep  an  impression  on  the  pages  of  the  Old  Testa- 
ment  They   were   views   from   which 

the  Israelite  was  long  in  emancipating  himself. 
The  inner  history  of  the  Old  Testament  is,  in  fact,  in 
large  measure  a  history  of  the  gradual  widening  of 
the  religious  consciousness  of  Israel  in  regard  to  them 
and  their  suppression  by  a  higher  and  more  spiritual 
form  of  faith."' 

In  the  Expositor's  Bible  both  the  old  and  the  new 
schools  of  criticism  are  represented.  Thus  a  great 
opportunity  was  ofifered  to  critics;  and  a  crucial  experi- 
ment was  tried  which  was  of  the  utmost  importance 
to  all  Christian  Churches.  When  the  books  of  the 
Old  Testament  were  read  in  the  light  of  the  new 
criticism,  would  it  still  be  possible  to  derive  from  them 
a  consistent  and  reasonable  account  of  the  history  and 
religion  of  Israel ;  would  they  still  stimulate  and  nour- 
ish Christians'  faith,  piety,  and  devotion,  and  minister 
to  the  needs  of  the  spiritual  life?  The  volumes  of  this 
series  written  by  representatives  of  the  new  school  of 
criticism  have  enabled  us,  it  is  claimed,  to  answer  this 
question  with  an  emphatic  affirmative.  For  the  gen- 
eral public  the  first  volume  of  Prof.  Geo.  Adam  Smith's 
Isaiah  was  an  epoch-making  book,  revealing  undreamed- 
of   possibilities    in    the    way    of    fresh    light    breaking 


^Tlie  belief  in  a  dim,  shadowy  existence  in  Sheol,  the  Semitic  Hades; 
and  the  belief  in  exact  retribution  for  sin  and  reward  for  virtue  in  the 
present    life. 

'Religion   of    Egyptians,   etc.,   p.    296. 


22  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

forth  from  the  ancient  Scriptures.  The  British  Weekly 
wrote  of  this  work,  ''Isaiah  is  for  the  first  time  made 
perfectly  intelHgible  to  the  people  .  .  .  ]\Ir.  Smith 
has  opened  out  a  new  line  of  work  .  .  .  which  will 
do  more  than  many  arguments  to  reconcile  a  timorous 
and  misguided  public  to  scientific  scholarship  and  the 
newer  criticism." 

Another  modern  tendency  which  influences  the 
interpretation  of  the  Old  Testament  is  the  decay  of 
ecclesiastical  authority.  There  are  still,  and  always 
will  be,  those  who  are  willing  to  believe  anything  on 
the  bare  word  of  their  favorite  preacher.  But  in  the 
long  run  this  kind  of  faith  does  not  count.  On  the 
other  hand  there  are  many,  religious  or  capable  of 
religion,  to  whom  it  would  seem  absurd  to  suggest  that 
the  decrees  of  Churches  had  any  great  value  in  matters 
of  faith.  As  regards  the  Old  Testament,  for  instance, 
neither  the  creeds  of  ancient  councils  nor  the  resolu- 
tions of  modern  synods,  neither  papal  bulls  nor  episco- 
pal edicts  could  seriously  affect  the  attitude  of  such 
men  to,  say.  Canticles,  Ecclesiastes  and  Esther.  The 
testimony  of  the  Church  Universal — of  which  creeds, 
confessions,  and  other  standards  are  the  least  impor- 
tant part — induces  inquirers  to  read  the  Bible.  But  in 
religion,  an  authority  is  only  effective  by  its  own  in- 
herent force;  it  must  be  able  to  assert  itself  so  as  to 
win  sympathy,  to  produce  conviction,  and  to  secure 
obedience.  A  distinguished  Cambridge  scholar  is  in 
the  habit  of  saying,  when  he  is  asked  how  he  ''takes" 
a  passage,  that  he  does  not  take  the  passage,  but  the 
passage  takes  him.  So  the  great  sayings,  discourses, 
and  narratives  of  the  Old  Testament  take  hold  of  their 
readers  and  compel  acknowledgment  of  the  authority 
of  Revelation.    The  best  we  can  do  for  the  Bible  is  to 


INTRODUCTION  TO  OLD  TESTAMENT  23 

let  it  speak  for  itself;  the  only  essential  doctrine  of 
Scripture  is  that  it  is  the  duty  and  privilege  of  every 
man  to  read  it,  and  to  read  intelligently,  taking 
advantage  of  all  the  light  afforded  by  history, 
archaeology  and  criticism.  The  great  object  of  the 
Expositor's  Bible  has  been  just  this — to  let  the  Bible 
speak  for  itself. 

III. — RECENT    RELIGIOUS    LITERATURE — GENERAL. 

Criticism  has  powerfully  stimulated  public  interest 
in  the  Bible,  and  the  wealth  of  new  information  and 
new  ideas  has  produced  an  extensive  popular  literature 
on  the  Sacred  Scriptures.  The  traditional  etiquette 
which  demanded  that  the  Bible  should  be  marked  off 
from  all  other  books  by  its  sombre  binding  and  its 
arrangement  in  chapters  and  verses  has  been  rudely 
set  aside.  Almost  every  possible  variety  of  editions 
have  been  published  of  late  years — Bibles  of  every 
shape  and  size,  from  the  portly  quarto  for  the  lectern 
to  the  dainty  series  of  duodecimo  volumes  for  the 
pocket ;  Bibles  with  and  without  notes  or  illustrations ; 
Bibles  treated  as  classic  literature;  Bibles  bound  in 
cheerful  colors  with  aesthetic  tooling.  It  has  become 
possible  to  read  the  Scriptures  in  a  railway  train  with- 
out being  guilty  of  pharasalc  ostentation.  At  the 
same  time  there  has  been  a  deluge  of  "Helps,"  ''Com- 
panions," 'Teachers'  Notes,"  etc.,  etc.,  intended  to 
supply  the  latest  information  in  popular,  but  some- 
times a  little  misleading  as  to  the  critical  results  of 
modern.  Biblical  study. 

But  the  most  important  feature  of  recent  literature  for 
ordinary  Bible  students  is  the  publication  of  standard 
works  of  reference  in  which  the  real  results  of  modern 
research  are  made  accessible.     For  nearly  thirty  years 


24  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

Smith's  Dictionary  of  the  Bible,  in  its  English  and  Ameri- 
can editions,  rendered  invaluable  service;  and  a  revision 
of  this  work  was  published  some  time  since.  But  just 
recently  two  entirely  new  Bible  Dictionaries  have  been 
published  in  which  British,  American,  Dutch,  German 
and  Swiss  scholars  of  all  the  Evangelical  Churches, 
together  with  one  or  two  learned  Jews,  co-operate. 

Dr.  Hastings'  Dictionary  of  the  Bible^  represents  the 
more  conservative  position,  while  somewhat  more  ad- 
vanced views  find  expression  in  the  Encyclopcedia  Biblical 
edited  by  Prof.  Cheyne  and  Dr.  J.  Sutherland  Black. 

In  all  this  literary  activity,  the  various  Bible  Societies 
have  taken  an  important  part ;  chiefly  through  their  instru- 
mentality the  Bible  in  whole  or  in  part  has  been  translated 
into  over  400  languages,  and  probably  since  the  invention 
of  printing  about  300,000,000  copies  of  the  Scriptures  or 
of  portions  have  been  put  into  circulation.  An  important 
feature  in  this  work  is  the  decision  of  the  British  and 
Foreign  Bible  Society  to  circulate  the  Revised  Version — a 
step  all  the  more  significant  as  it  followed  shortly  after 
the  publication  of  the  American  edition  of  the  Revised 
Version,  and  the  vote  of  the  Anglican  Convocation 
approving  of  the  reading  of  the  new  translation  in  the 
services  of  the  English  Established  Church. 

The  last  fifteen  or  twenty  years  have  seen  a  great  growth 
of  religious  journalism.  Popular  periodicals  have  multi- 
plied; and  several  important  theological  reviews  have 
been  started  in  England  and  America,  notably  the  Critical 
Review,  the  Hibbert  Journal,  and  the  American  Journal 
of  Theology. 

^T.  &  T.  Clark,  Edinburgh.     Four  Volumes,  with  a  fifth  supplementary 
volume. 

*  A.  &  C.  Black.     Four  \'olumes. 


INTRODUCTION  TO  OLD  TESTAMENT  25 

IV. — THE   PROGRESS   OF   ARCHEOLOGY. 

The  years  since  the  piibhcation  of  our  series  began,  in 
1887,  have  witnessed  marked  progress  in  the  study  of  the 
Old  Testament,  of  which  we  propose  to  give  a  brief 
sketch,  beginning  with  the  Archaeology,  /.  c,  chiefly  the 
results  of  excavations  in  Egypt,  and  in  Syria,  Assyria, 
Babylonia,  and  Arabia.  The  last  fifteen  years  have  made 
immense  additions  to  the  known  facts  which  have  a  bear- 
ing on  the  history  and  religion  of  Israel,  and  the  inter- 
pretation of  the  Hebrew  Scriptures.  Assiduous  explora- 
tion is  continually  pushing  back  our  knowledge  of  the 
ancient  East  to  a  more  and  more  remote  antiquity,  so  that 
already  we  discern  the  dim  outlines  of  history  in  what 
we  have  been  wont  to  call  prehistoric  times.  We  seem  to 
know  something  of  life  in  Egypt  in  B.  C.  7000  or  it  may 
be  even  B.  C.  10,000.  At  the  same  time  our  knowledge 
of  later  periods  is  continually  increasing,  though  com- 
paratively little  is  found  that  directly  and  explicitly  either 
confirms  or  contradicts  the  Old  Testament.  Perhaps  the 
most  relevant  amongst  recent  discoveries  is  an  inscription 
of  Meneptah  II.  This  king  is  often  spoken  of  in  popular 
handbooks  as  the  'Tharaoh  of  the  Exodus,"  and  his 
father  and  predecessor  Rameses  II  is  referred  to  as  the 
"Pharaoh  of  the  Oppression."  But  in  this  newly  found 
inscription  Meneptah  claims  to  have  subdued  Israelites 
in  Syria. 

But  the  most  striking  amongst  recent  discoveries  is  the 
collection  known  as  the  Tell  eVAmarna  Tablets ,  found 
at  Amarna  in  the  Nile  Valley  in  1887.  They  form  a 
connecting  link  between  Egyptology  and  Assyriology, 
and  bring  forth  their  relation  with  Palestine.  For, 
though  they  are  part  of  the  archives  of  the  Foreign 
Office  of  Amenophis  IV,  B.  C.  1400,  they  are,  for  the 


26  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

most  part,  written  in  the  cuneiform  Babylonian,  and  con- 
sist of  despatches  to  the  Pharaohs  from  Babylonian, 
Hittite,  and  other  Eastern  kings,  and  from  the  Egyptian 
officials,  and  tributaries  in  Palestine,  and  the  rest  of  Syria. 
These  letters  throw  a  flood  of  light  on  the  condition  of 
Western  Asia.  We  see,  for  instance,  that  at  that  time 
Palestine  and  Phoenicia  were  provinces  of  the  Egyptian 
Empire. 

It  is  also  maintained  by  many  scholars  that  certain 
invaders  of  Palestine,  the  Habiri,  who  figure  largely  in 
these  letters,  are  the  Hebrews,  although  the  period  is  at 
least  a  century  earlier  than  the  time  of  the  so-called 
"Pharaohs  of  the  Oppression  and  the  Exodus." 

In  Palestine,  at  Lachish  and  Gezer,  the  explorers  have 
unearthed  the  remains  of  the  successive  races  which  one 
after  another  ruled  in  the  land. 

In  Babylonia,  there  has  been  quite  recently  a  great 
"find"  of  the  laws,  official  letters  and  other  documents 
of  Hammurabi,  B.  C.  2300,  usually  identified  with  the 
Amraphel  of  Genesis  XIV,  the  contemporary  of  Abra- 
ham. These  and  other  discoveries  have  led  Paul  Haupt, 
Winckler,  Sayce,  Fried.  Delitzsch  and  other  scholars  to 
attribute  to  Babylon  a  predominant  influence,  social, 
political,  and  religious  in  the  ancient  East.  Hence  Fried. 
Delitzsch's  famous  lectures  before  the  German  Emperor, 
in  which  that  distinguished  Assyriologist  treated  the 
religion  of  Israel  almost  as  an  inferior  offshoot  from  that 
of  Babylon,  and  initiated  a  controversy  which  is  still 
raging.  These  discoveries  are  so  frequent  and  so 
extensive  that  there  is  little  encouragement  to  anyone  to 
attempt  to  write  an  adequate  and  comprehensive  account 
of  them.  However  complete  it  might  be  when  written, 
fresh  discoveries  would  probably  come  to  hand  even  before 
it  was  published,  and  it  would  rapidly  become  more  and 


INTRODUCTION  TO  OLD  TESTAMENT  27 

more  out  of  date.  Nevertheless  a  full  statement  up  to 
certain  dates  may  be  found  in  the  works  of  the  scholars 
mentioned  above  and  others  such  as  Hommel,  Jastrow, 
Jensen,  Budge,  Zimmern,  Flinders  Pctrie,  etc. ;  in  the 
proceedings  and  transactions  of  the  various  American, 
English,  French,  and  German  Exploration  Societies ;  in 
the  most  recent  commentaries  and  works  on  the  History 
and  Religion  of  Israel. 

What  is  specially  known  in  Germany  as  Archaeology, 
viz.,  the  study  of  manners  and  customs,  has  been  brought 
up  to  date  in  two  standard  German  works  by  Nowack 
and  Benzinger,  respectively. 

We  may  briefly  refer  here  to  the  rapid  development  in 
recent  times  of  the  science  of  Comparative  Religion, 
to  which  amongst  others,  Prof,  C.  H.  Toy,  of  Harvard, 
has  rendered  important  services.  A  marked  feature  has 
been  the  tendency  to  emphasize  the  legends  and  ritual  of 
savage  tribes,  and  their  survivals  in  the  literature  and 
services  of  more  advanced  religions.  Attempts  are  made 
to  ascertain  from  such  data  how  religions  in  general, 
and  any  given  religion  in  particular,  have  developed; 
and  thus  lay  down  principles  by  which  to  interpret  the 
available  information  in  any  special  case.  In  reference 
to  this  branch  of  learning  Prof.  Morris  Jastrow  of 
the  University  of  Pennsylvania  writes  thus':  "J-  G. 
Frazer's  great  work  more  particularly.  The  Golden 
Bough,  marks  an  epoch  in  the  study  of  religious  rites." 

V. — PROGRESS  IN  PHILOLOGY,  ETC. 

Many  important  additions  have  recently  been  made  to 
the  student's  apparatus  for  the  linguistic  and  textual 
study  of  the  Old  Testament.  Numerous  grammars, 
reading-books  and  lexicons  of  Assyrian  and  other  Semitic 
languages   have   been   published.      In    Hebrew    itself   a 

^The  Study  of  Religion,  p.   51. 


28  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

standard  grammar  has  been  provided  by  the  translation 
of  the  twenty-fifth  and  twenty-sixth  editions  Gesenius 
revised  by  Kautzsch.  Dr.  Solomon  Mandelkern  has  pub- 
lished a  new  Concordance  to  the  Hebrew  Text  of  the 
Old  Testament.  A  new  standard  edition  of  Gesenius 
Lexicon  by  Profs.  Brown,  Driver,  and  Briggs  is  being 
issued  by  the  Clarendon  Press. 

Biblical  Hebrew  has  also  had  light  thrown  on  it  by 
the  discovery  of  the  original  Hebrew  text  of  large  por- 
tions of  Ecclesiastims.  It  was  indeed  maintained  by 
Margoliouth  that  the  documents  discovered  were  a 
retranslation  into  Hebrew  from  Greek  and  other  versions ; 
but,  after  much  controversy,  the  verdict  of  scholarship 
is  in  favor  of  the  originality  of  the  Hebrew  text  in  these 
documents. 

As  regards  the  Septuagint:  Prof.  Swete  has  edited 
a  small  edition  in  three  volumes  with  the  readings  of 
the  most  important  manuscripts,  together  with  a  fourth 
volume  containing  the  Introduction.  A  large  edition 
which  will  give  the  same  texf  'Svith  an  ample  apparatus 
criticus  intended  to  provide  material  for  a  critical 
determination  of  the  text,"  is  being  prepared.  Messrs. 
Hatch  and  Redpath  have  compiled  a  new  Concordance  to 
the  Septuagint;  but  a  modern  grammar  and  lexicon  are 
still  "felt  wants." 

VI. — RECENT  CRITICISM  AND  EXEGESIS. 

The  progress  of  Biblical  knowledge  has  necessitated 
the  publication  of  new  series  of  commentaries.  In  English 
there  is  the  International  Critical  Commentary  f  and 
some  of  the  later  volumes  of  the  Cambridge  Bible,  e.  g.^ 
Prof.    Driver's    Daniel,    are    rather    first-class    commen- 


^That  of  the  "Vatican  MS.,"  with  its  lacunae  supplied  from  the  uncial 
MS.  which  occupies  the  next  place  in  point  of  age  and  importance. 

»T.  &  T.  Clark.  Judges  by  Prof.  G.  F.  Moore,  Samuel  by  Prof.  H. 
P.  Smith,  etc.,  etc.,  only  four  or  five  O.  T.  volumes  published  as  yet. 


INTRODUCTION  TO  OLD  TESTAMENT  29 

taries  for  scholars  than  elementary  works  for  general 
readers.  In  German  there  are  Prof.  Nowack's  Hand- 
koniniciitar  cum  Altcn  Testament;''  Prof.  Karl  Marti's 
Kurcer  Handkommentar  zum  Alien  Testament^  and  the 
Old  Testament  sections  of  Profs.  Strack  and  Zock- 
ler's  Kurzgefaszter  Kommentar.^  Later  on  reference  will 
be  made  to  some  volumes  of  these  series. 

In  addition  to  the  above  works,  there  are  others  spe- 
cially intended  to  show  how  criticism  has  divided  up 
the  books  of  the  Old  Testament  into  the  various  older 
documents  from  which  they  are  believed  to  have  been 
compiled.  This  analysis  is  shown  in  the  German  transla- 
tion edited  by  Kautzsch  by  means  of  initials  in  the  mar- 
gin; Dr.  Haupt's  Sacred  Books  of  the  Old  Testament* 
(Hebrew  text)  and  Polychrome  Bible,*'  by  means  of 
colored  backgrounds  on  which  the  text  is  printed; 
and  in  the  Oxford  Society  of  Historical  Theology;  The 
Hexateiich^  by  means  of  parallel  columns.  The  intro- 
duction to  the  last  named  work  is  the  most  complete 
popular  statement  of  the  grounds  for  the  modern  theory 
of  the  Pentateuch.  Technical  details  and  a  formal  con- 
trast of  the  arguments  for  and  against  this  theory  may 
be  found  in  the  discussion  between  Profs.  W.  R.  Harper 
and  W.  H.  Green  in  Hebraica,  1888-90.  Numerous 
Introductions  to  the  Old  Testament  have  expounded  the 
current  critical  views,  notably  for  English  and  American 
readers  the  successive  editions  of  Prof.  Driver's  Intro- 
duction to  the  Literature  of  the  Old  Testament. 


^V'andenhoeck  and  Ruprecht,  Gottingen.  Job  by  Prof.  Budde,  Psalms 
by  Prof.  Baethgen,  Ecra,  etc.,  etc.,  by  Prof.  Siegfried,  etc. 

"J.  C.  B.  Mohr  (Paul  Siebeck),  Freiburg,  i.  B,  Genesis  by  Holzinger, 
Ezekiel  by    Bertholet,    Proverbs   by    Wildeboer,   etc.,    etc. 

•Oskar  Beck,  Munich,  Orelli  on  Isaiah  and /eremt'aA,  etc.,  etc. 

*Gencsis  by  C.  J.  Ball;  Numbers  by  Prof.  J.  A.  Paterson  (Edinburgh), 
etc.,  etc. 

•Edited  by  J.  Estlin  Carpenter  and  G.  Harford  Battersby. 


30  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

Naturally  these  various  works  represent  not  merely  the 
position  of  criticism  and  exegesis  twenty  years  ago,  but 
also  the  progress  made  since  then.  As  regards  the  His- 
torical Books  critics  have  chiefly  been  engaged  in  the 
application  of  modern  methods  and  principles  which  are 
now  very  generally  accepted.  Development  has  taken 
place  in  three  directions.  First,  much  labor  has  been 
given  to  the  more  exact  distribution  of  the  contents  of  the 
Hexatench  between  the  main  documents  used  by  its  com- 
pilers, e.  g.,  Prof.  B.  W.  Bacon's  anatysis  of  Exodus. 
Secondly,  attempts  have  been  made  to  divide  up  these 
main  documents  into  still  older  documents  from  which 
they  have  been  compiled.  Steuernagel,  for  instance,  re- 
gards Deuteronomy  as  a  mosaic  of  paragraphs  and 
clauses  from  earlier  codes,  and  finds  a  criterion  between 
different  sources  in  the  use,  respectively,  of  the  singular 
or  the  plural  form  of  address.  So  far  his  views  have  not 
met  with  much  acceptance.""  Thirdly,  the  theory  has  been 
very  widely  advocated  that  the  historical  books  of  Judges 
— I  Kings  are  partly  compiled  from  the  documents  used 
by  the  editors  of  the  Hexateuch.^  Gunkel's  commentary 
on  Genesis^  is  of  special  importance;  it  pleads  for 
a  fuller  recognition  of  the  indebtedness  of  Israel 
to  the  religions  of  its  neighbors,  and  maintains  that, 
as  the  stories  of  the  Creation,  the  Fall,  and  the  Flood 
were  derived  from  Babylon,  so  the  Patriarchal  narratives 
were  mostly  borrowed  from  the  Canaanites  after  the  set- 
tlement of  Israel  in  Palestine.  The  account  of  Joseph, 
however,  is  largely  taken  from  Egyptian  sources. 

As  regards  the  Prophetical  Books,  there  is  little  of  gen- 


^For  other  examples  of  the  analysis  of  the  main  documents  into  earlier 
works,  see  Gunkel's  Genesis,  the  Polychrome  Genesis,  Joshua,  and  Prof, 
H.  G.  Mitchell's  World  Before  Abraham,  etc.,  etc. 

"See  the  Polychrome  Judges  and  Samuel. 

'German. 


INTRODUCTION  TO  OLD  TESTAMENT  31 

cral  interest  to  record;  the  composite  authorship  of 
Isaiah  XL — LXVI  is  more  widely  held. 

When  we  come  to  the  Hagiographa,  or  third  or  closing 
section  of  the  Hebrew  Canon,  Esther  has  been  the  subject 
of  interesting  speculations.  Chiefly  because  Mordecai 
and  Esther  are  the  names  of  the  Babylonian  gods  Mero- 
dach  and  Ishtar,  it  has  been  suggested  that  the  book  is 
based  on  a  Babylonian  myth  which  the  Jews  appropriated 
and  adapted,  as  in  earlier  days,  according  to  Gunkel,  they 
made  use  of  the  legends  of  the  Canaanites. 

The  origin  and  history  of  the  Psalms  is  still  made  the 
ground  of  much  controversy,  and  the  tendency  of  criti- 
cism is  to  deny  the  existence  of  any  Pre-exilic  Psalms;^ 
and  to  assign  a  large  number  to  the  Maccabean  period. 
It  is  even  held''  that,  in  the  time  of  the  Maccabees,  the 
Psalm  was  the  organ  of  political  invective,  and  played  the 
part  of  the  leading  article  in  a  modern  newspaper. 

In  connection  with  Canticles  a  theory  put  forward 
some  time  since  has  been  revived  in  an  emended  form, 
and  with  a  fuller  discussion  of  the  evidence.'  This 
view  is  that  "the  book  is  a  collection  of  songs,  connected 
with  a  Syrian  custom,  called  the  'King's  Week.'  During 
the  first  week  after  marriage  the  bride  and  bridegroom 
play  at  being  king  and  queen,  and  are  addressed  as  such 
by  a  mock  court,  in  a  series  of  songs  similar  to  those  of 
Canticles.  Thus  Canticles  would  contain  a  specimen  of 
the  cycle  of  songs  used  at  a  seven  days'  village  feast  in 
honor  of  a  peasant  bride  and  bridegroom,  the  latter  being 
addressed  as  'Solomon/  the  type  of  a  splendid  and  pow- 
erful king."  * 

*£.  g.,   Cheyne. 

■Duhm. 

"Mainly  by  Budde,  in  the  New  World,  1894. 

^Biblical  Introduction,  Bennett  and  Adeney,  p.  169. 


32  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

VII. — THE   HISTORY  OF  ISRAEL  AND  ITS  RELIGION. 

Many  works  have  appeared  expounding  these  subjects 
in  the  Hght  of  modern  criticism."  Here  again  recent  work 
has  largely  been  a  development  on  lines  already  laid 
down.'  Much  attention  has  been  given  to  the  hints 
furnished  by  the  Pentateuch  as  to  the  early  history  of 
Israel,  and  these  have  been  compared  with  recent  dis- 
coveries from  the  monuments.  Many  scholars'  maintain 
that  the  Twelve  Tribes  of  later  history  represent  groups 
of  ancient  nomadic  clans  who  wandered  in  Western  Asia 
long  before  the  time  of  Moses;  that  only  a  section  of 
these  groups  went  down  into  Egypt  and  escaped  with 
Moses,  and  that  these  invaded  Canaan  at  one  period,  while 
other  kindred  clans  reinforced  them  at  a  later  time. 
Israel  and  the  Twelve  Tribes,  as  we  know  them,  arose  in 
Palestine  after  the  conquest,  by  the  subdivision  and 
regrouping  of  the  invading  clans,  and  their  combination 
with  the  Canaanites. 

Cheyne  and  Winckler  have  lately  advocated  theories 
which  almost  revolutionize  the  history  of  Israel.  The 
grounds  of  these  theories  are  largely  as  follows:  The 
cuneiform  inscriptions  mention  a  kingdom  of  Musri  in 
Northwestern  Arabia.  For  this  reason,  and  for  various 
technical  considerations  of  textual  and  historical  criticism, 
it  is  proposed  in  many  passages  to  substitute  Miisri  for 
Egypt,  Geshnr  for  Assyria  (Asshur)  and  to  restore  very 
numerous  references  to  Jerahmeel — according  to  our  pres- 
ent text  an  obscure  tribe  to  the  south  of  Palestine.*    With 


*^For  instance,  in  English  or  translated  into  English,  Histories  of 
Israel  by  Cornill,  Kittel,  and  Wellhausen,  Prof.  J.  F.  McCurdy's  History, 
Prophecy,  and  the  Monuments,  etc.  O.  T.  Theologies  by  Piepenbring,  Duff, 
etc.;  and  in  German  Smend's  Textbook  of  the  History  of  O.  T.  Religion, 
and  the  latest  edition  of  Marti's  revision  of  Kayser's  O.  T.  Theology; 
G.  A.   Smith's  Historical  Geography  of  the  Holy  Land. 

"Cf.   above,  p.  19. 

*E.  g.,  Steuernagel  in  his  Immigration  of  the  Israelites  into  Palestine. 

*Only  mentioned  I  Samuel  xxvii.  10,  xxx.  29  and  I  Chron.  ii.  9-42. 


INTRODUCTION  TO  OLD  TESTAMENT  33 

such  alternatives  and  resources  at  the  critic's  disposal, 
history  would  seem  to  become  anything  that  a  taste  or 
fancy  may  dictate ;  so  far  these  views'  have  not  met  with 
much  acceptance.  In  the  later  history  the  more  recent  de- 
velopments are  chiefly  concerned  with  the  interval  between 
the  Return  and  the  Maccabees.  Some  time  since  Prof. 
Kosters  denied  that  the  account  of  the  Return  in  Ezra 
was  historical.  According  to  him  there  was  no  Return 
in  538  B.  C,  and  the  Temple  was  rebuilt  by  the  remnant 
of  Jews  left  behind  in  Judea  at  the  time  of  the  Captivity. 
Kosters  has  had  many  followers  and  many  adverse  critics, 
but  opinion  inclines  to  accept  the  substantial  historicity  of 
the  account  of  the  Return.^  It  is  also  maintained  that 
various  sections  of  Ezra — Nehemiah  do  not  stand  in  cor- 
rect chronological  order,  and  that  the  first  mission  of 
Nehemiah  preceded  that  of  Ezra.  Another  interesting 
discussion  has  arisen  in  connection  with  Zerubbabel, 
Haggai,  and  Zechariah.'  Zerubbabel  is  supposed,  at 
the  instigation  of  Haggai  and  Zechariah,  to  have  declared 
Judah  independent  of  Persia,  and  to  have  ascended  the 
throne  as  the  promised  Messiah.  He  was  promptly 
crushed  and  put  to  death  by  the  Persian  government,  and 
— according  to  this  view — he  is  the  ''Servant  of  Jehovah" 
whose  fate  is  described  in  Isaiah  LIII.  There  may  be 
a  measure  of  truth  in  all  this,  but  these  views  are  not 
likely  to  be  adopted  in  their  entirety. 

Another  important  suggestion  as  to  the  history  of 
Israel  after  the  Exile  comes  from  Prof.  Cheyne,  follow- 
ing to  some  extent  in  the  footsteps  of  Robertson  Smith 
and  earlier  scholars.  It  is  that  the  Jews  took  part  in  the 
great  rebellion  against  Artaxerxes  III,  Ochus  circa  B  C. 

^See  Cheyne's  Critica  Biblica,  and  his  articles  in  the  Encyclopadia 
Biblica. 

■See  discussion  in  G.  A.  Smith's  Book  of  the  Twelve  Prophets  (Expos- 
itor's Bible). 

"See  Sellin,  Serubbabel.  etc. 


34  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

350;  that  their  rising  was  caused  by  religious  enthusi- 
asm, and  led  to  the  desecration  of  the  Temple.  This  ca- 
lamity is  supposed  to  have  been  the  occasion  of  the  compo- 
sition of  certain  Psalms  and  other  passages/  which  most 
scholars  either  connect  with  the  destruction  of  Jerusalem 
by  Nebuchadnezzar  or  refer  to  the  Maccabean  period. 

The  progress  of  the  historical  study  of  Old  Testament 
Theology  is  hindered  by  the  lack  of  agreement,  even 
amongst  scholars  of  the  modern  school,  as  to  the  date 
of  many  important  passages.  It  is  impossible  to  write 
certainly  as  to  the  teaching,  for  instance,  of  Isaiah  and 
Amos,  or  as  to  the  stages  of  development  of  the  Religion 
of  Israel  while  authorities  of  the  first  rank  are  divided 
as  to  whether  the  Messianic  sections  in  Isaiah  and  the 
monotheistic  verses  in  Amos  were  composed  by  those 
prophets,  or  are  post-exilic  additions.  Moreover  there 
is  no  immediate  prospect  of  a  settlement  of  these  ques- 
tions, for  the  data  are  meagre  and  ambiguous,  and  the 
grounds  on  which  individual  writers  arrive  at  decisions 
are  largely  subjective. 

Nevertheless  a  great  deal  is  clear  and  certain ;  and  even 
where  dates  are  doubtful,  much  of  the  teaching  is  inde- 
pendent of  chronology.  Within  these  limits  the  Exposi- 
tor s  Bible  and  other  works  have  done  much  to  bring 
popular  theology  into  line  with  the  results  of  larger 
knowledge  and  fresh  research  and  discussion.  This 
process  has  now  reached  a  point  which  may  enable 
us  to  say  with  the  Bishop  of  Winchester,""  "The  period 
of  transition,  the  period  of  anxious  suspense  of  judg- 
ment, is  drawing  to  a  close.  It  is  seen  and  felt  that  the 
interpretation  of  Holy  Scripture  is  not  less  literal,  not 
less   spiritual,   not  less   in   conformity  with  the  pattern 

*  Especially  Psalms  XLIV,   LXXIV,  and  LXXIX. 

■Dr.   H.    E.   Ryle,   in  his  Early  Narratives  of  Genesis,  published  when 
he  was  Hulsean  Professor  of  Divinity  at  Cambridge,  p.  IX. 


INTRODUCTION  TO  OLD  TESTAMENT  35 

which  the  Divine  Teacher  gave,  when  it  is  rendered  more 
true  to  history  by  the  fiery  tests  of  criticism  and  literary 
analysis." 

VIII. — CONCLUSION. 

This  brief  survey  has  necessarily  been  occupied  for  the 
most  part  with  the  developments  of  recent  research.  But 
in  these  years  as  in  previous  periods  the  Old  Testament 
has  been  the  subject  of  much  searching,  preaching  and 
writing  which  has  taken  little  or  no  account  of  changes 
in  criticism,  or,  indeed,  of  any  criticism  at  all;  but  have 
taken  the  narratives  as  they  found  them,  and,  as  far  as 
authorship  has  been  concerned,  have  made  the  assump- 
tions which  seemed  easiest  and  most  edifying.  Such 
work,  too,  is  most  valuable.  The  spiritual  life  which 
speaks  to  us  through  the  Hebrew  Scriptures  is  so  full  of 
energy,  variety,  and  truth  that  even  the  simplest  methods 
of  treatment  yield  great  results.  These  results,  moreover, 
have  sometimes  a  special  quality  which  is  absent  from 
more  studious  exposition.  Even  after  many  centuries  the 
inspired  books  are  like  rich  virgin  soil  which  yield  a  har- 
vest even  to  the  crudest  methods  of  cultivation.  Thus 
the  scribes  of  our  day,  instructed  unto  the  Kingdom  of 
Heaven,  are  still  bringing  out  of  their  treasures  things 
new  and  old ;  and  both  alike  minister  to  the  coming  of  the 
Kingdom,  both  the  new  and  the  old,  both  the  influence 
of  ancient  association  and  venerable  tradition,  and  the 
new  life  and  power  and  hope  that  spring  to  birth  in  dawn- 
ing light  of  a  new  day  of  the  Lord. 

"At  last,  but  yet  the  night  had  memories 

Sad  in  their  sweetness,  noble  in  their  pain, 
Which,  looking  backward  half  regretfully 

In  longing  day-dreams  oft  we  live  again. 
At  last,  but  this  new  day,  that  slowly  dawns. 

Shall  satisfy  with  its  meridian  fires 
Alike  the  longing  born  of  fond  regret 

And  deeper  yearnings  that  our  hope  inspires." 


36  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

That  the  Old  Testament  will  still  hold  its  place  of  power 
in  any  new  dispensation  is  guaranteed  by  its  significance 
for  Christ  and  His  Gospel.  As  Prof.  G.  A.  Smith  has 
said  in  a  work  which  states  the  religious  position  in  the 
light  of  recent  Biblical  study/  Christ  accepted  the  history 
recorded  in  the  Old  Testament  "as  the  preparation  for 
Himself,  and  taught  His  disciples  to  find  Him  in  it.  He 
used  it  to  justify  His  mission  and  to  illuminate  the 
mystery  of  His  Cross.  .  .  .  Above  all,  He  fed  His 
own  soul  with  its  contents,  and  in  the  great  crises  of  His 
life  sustained  Himself  upon  it  as  upon  the  living  and 
sovereign  Word  of  God.  These  are  the  highest  external 
proofs — if  indeed  we  can  call  them  external — for  the 
abiding  validity  of  the  Old  Testament  in  the  life  and 
doctrine  of  Christ's  Church.  What  was  indispensable  to 
the  Redeemer  must  always  be  indispensable  to  the 
redeemed."  W.  H.  Bennett. 

Hampstead,  London,  April,  1905. 

^Modern  Criticism  and  the  Preaching  of  the  Old  Testament,  p.  II. 


GENERAL   INTRODUCTION  TO   THE 
EXPOSITOR'S    BIBLE 


NEW    TESTAMENT 

By  Walter  F.  Adeney,  M.  A. 

Professor  of  New  Testament  Exegesis  at  Lancashire  College, 

Manchester 

I. — CHARACTERISTICS  OF   THE   EXPOSITION 

When  we  pass  from  the  volumes  of  the  Expositor's 
Bible  that  deal  with  the  Old  Testament  to  those  which 
expound  the  books  of  the  New  Testament  we  discover 
less  departure  from  the  traditional  attitude.  And  yet 
a  very  little  knowledge  of  the  enormous  amount  of 
research  which  has  been  prosecuted  during  recent 
years  in  the  fruitful  field  of  primitive  Christian  litera- 
ture and  its  surrounding  scenes  must  convince  us  that 
here  also  was  a  clamorous  call  for  a  fresh  treat- 
ment of  the  whole  subject.  It  is  much  to  have  the 
books  taken  one  by  one  and  treated  each  as  a  distinct 
entity ;  in  this  way  we  are  led  on  to  perceive  that  richer 
harmony  of  the  various  apostolic  notes  which  means 
so  much  more  than  the  unison  of  the  older  methods: 
First,  instead  of  the  familiar  treatment  of  minute 
phrases  commonly  known  as  ''text,"  we  have  the  wider 
survey  and  broader  handling  of  the  arguments  of  the 
books,  which  to  those  who  have  not  been  accustomed 
to  it  appears  as  a  revelation,  so  that  these  books  be- 
come new  things  to  them.  Then  we  have  that  indi- 
vidual treatment,  that  temporary  isolation  of  the  books, 
which  enables  us  to  understand  their  limitations  as 
well  as  the  amplitude  of  their  contents.  Lastly,  we 
come  to  see  the  specific  teaching  of  the  several  New 


28  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

Testament  writers,  so  that  we  can  no  longer  confuse 
the  distinctive  message  of  the  author  of  Hebrews  with 
that  of  St.  Paul,  or  confound  the  ideas  of  St.  Peter  with 
those  of  St.  James. 

II. TEXT  AND  TRANSLATION 

The  Expositor's  Bible  is  based  upon  a  more  accurate 
text  and  more  exact  renderings  of  the  New  Testament 
than  were  available  for  previous  works  of  exposition. 
The  discovery  of  one  of  the  two  oldest  known  manu- 
scripts at  the  Monastery  of  St.  Catharine  on  Mount 
Sinai,  in  the  middle  of  the  nineteenth  century,  is  only 
one,  though  perhaps  the  greatest,  of  the  steps  in  ad- 
vance towards  obtaining  a  correct  Greek  Testament 
which  have  been  taken  during  the  last  hundred  years. 
The  immense  labors  of  Tischendorf  in  the  collation  of 
manuscripts  and  readings  from  the  Fathers,  following 
the  earlier  work  of  Mill,  Griesbach  and  others,  but  with 
a  much  richer  mine  of  materials  to  draw  upon,  laid  a 
foundation  on  which  later  experts  have  been  laboring 
with  the  aim  of  producing  the  purest  possible  text.^ 
Westcott  and  Hort  went  further  in  working  out  a  scien- 
tific theory  with  canons  of  interpretation  which  at  first 
appeared  to  sweep  the  field  and  claim  almost  universal 
assent.'  More  recently,  however,  it  has  been  felt  that 
these  scholars  were  tempted  to  rely  too  much  on  one  or 
two  old  manuscripts — chiefly,  indeed,  on  a  single 
manuscript,  the  Vatican,  and  to  treat  too  contemptu- 
ously the  claims  of  what  is  known  as  the  "Western 
Text,"  represented  among  other  authorities  by  the 
great  Cambridge  MS.,  the  Codex  Becae.  Accord- 
ingly their  text  cannot    be    regarded  as  final.^     Mean- 

*See  Tischendorf,  Novum  Testamentum  Greece,  8th  edit. 

*See  Hort,  Introduction  to  Westcott  and  Hort's  N.   T. 

»See  Blass,  Philology  of  the  Gospels;  Nestle,  Textual  Criticism  of 
the  Greek  Testament;  Kenyon,  Handbook  to  the  Textual  Criticism  of  the 
New  Testament, 


INTRODUCTION  TO  NEW  TESTAMENT  39 

while  perhaps  the  soundest  working  Greek  Testament 
is  that  edited  by  Nestle  for  the  "British  and  Foreign 
Bible  Society,"  which  strikes  the  mean  of  several 
critical  editions.  The  more  accurate  text  has  been 
accompanied  by  more  correct  translations,  of  which 
the  most  conspicuous  are  the  English  and  American 
Revised  Versions.  This  may  be  described  as  substan- 
tially one  and  the  same  revision  of  the  so-called 
"Authorized  Version";  but  there  are  several  emenda- 
tions of  the  American  revisers  which  were  not  ac- 
cepted by  their  more  conservative  English  coadjutors, 
although  in  nearly  every  case  they  must  be  allowed  to 
be  improvements  both  as  regards  scholarship  and  also 
in  lucidity.  Since  the  Revised  Version  appeared  sev- 
eral completely  new  translations  of  the  New  Testament 
into  modern  English  have  been  published.* 

III. — RECENT    CRITICISM 

The  most  remarkable  characteristic  of  the  latest 
Biblical  criticism  is  the  application  to  the  New  Testa- 
ment of  those  disintegrating  processes  with  the  results 
of  which  on  Old  Testament  studies  we  have  long  been 
familiar.  This,  however,  is  by  no  means  so  alarming 
as  the  claims  of  the  more  radical  critics  might  suggest. 
It  is  true  that  some  scholars  carry  their  destructive 
criticism  to  an  extreme — for  instance,  Schmiedel  with 
the  gospels,  refusing  to  allow  full  assurance  for  the 
authenticity  of  more  than  five  of  our  Lord's  sayings, 
and  Van  Manen  with  the  epistles,  repudiating  the 
authenticity  of  all  those  ascribed  to  St.  Paul."  But  these 
critics  stand  almost  alone;  at  all  events  they  do  not 
represent  anything  like  the  normal  position  of  New 

*See  especially  Weymouth,  The  New  Testament  in  Modern  English; 
Moffatt,  The  Historical  New  Testament;  The  Twentieth  Century  New 
Testament. 

"See  Encyclopedia  Biblica;  also  Cheyne,  Bible  Problems, 


40  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

Testament  scholarship.  The  accident  of  their  promi- 
nence in  one  of  the  great  Bible  dictionaries,  which  is 
simply  due  to  editorial  sympathies,  must  not  disguise 
the  fact  of  their  eccentricity.  Nothing  is  more  re- 
markable in  recent  criticism  than  the  fact  that  while 
the  more  conservative  of  the  two  new  dictionaries* 
accepts  the  main  critical  position  of  advanced  scholar- 
ship with  regard  to  the  Old  Testament,  it  differs 
toto  coeld^  from  its  rival  in  its  treatment  of  the  New  Tes- 
tament. In  these  respects  it  fairly  corresponds  to  the 
position  taken  up  by  most  of  the  writers  of  the  Expos- 
itor's Bible. 

A  remarkable  approach  towards  unanimity  is  to  be 
seen  in  the  views  of  scholars  of  various  types  with 
reference  to  what  is  known  as  the  "synoptic  problem," 
the  problem  of  the  origin  of  our  first  three  gospels 
occasioned  by  the  perplexing  phenomena  of  their  fre- 
quent close  resemblance  and  signally  frequent  striking 
divergence.  Fifty  years  ago  opinions  about  this  question 
were  in  a  perfectly  chaotic  condition;  indeed,  there  were 
about  as  many  opinions  as  the  highest  possible  arith- 
metical variation  in  the  mutual  relations  of  the  gospels 
would  permit.  Some  put  Matthew  first,  some  Mark, 
some  Luke;  and  all  conceivable  theories  as  to  their  rela- 
tion one  to  another,  the  use  of  earlier  documents,  and  the 
degree  of  reliance  on  tradition  or  on  written  sources  to 
be  detected  in  their  authors  found  eager  advocates.  But 
gradually  the  turbid  waters  settled  and  certain  definite, 
generally  accepted  ideas  were  cr3^stallized.  In  the  present 
day  it  is  almost  universally  agreed  that  Mark  was  written 
by  the  man  whose  name  it  bgars,  although  when 
Pfleiderer  gave  his  adhesion  to  this  view  such  a  confes- 

*Hastings'  Dictionary  of  the  Bible. 
■The  Encyclopccdia  Biblica. 


INTRODUCTION  TO  NEW  TESTAMENT  41 

sion  from  one  who  was  regarded  as  a  leader  of  the  "left 
wing"  of  criticism  occasioned  some  surprise/  Further, 
it  is  the  generally  accepted  opinion  that  the  bulk  of  the 
narrative  portion  of  Matthew — the  chief  exceptions  being 
the  Infancy  and  Resurrection  narrative — is  based  on 
Mark,  and  that  the  same  is  true  to  a  considerable  extent 
with  regard  to  Luke.  There  has  been  much  discussion 
as  to  whether  St.  Mark's  gospel  has  undergone  revision. 
But  the  ripest  results  of  study  on  this  subject  are  repre- 
sented by  the  conclusions  of  Dr.  Abbott  who  has  shown 
that  our  Mark  is  really  the  earlier  edition  of  the  gospel 
which  in  a  later  and  slightly  modified  form,  its  rugged- 
ness  being  smoothed,  was  used  in  the  construction  of 
Matthew  and  Luke.  In  the  second  place,  it  is  very  gen- 
erally admitted  that  the  discourses  in  Matthew,  which 
are  inserted  in  five  blocks  of  sayings,  like  five  wedges 
driven  into  the  narrative  as  that  stands  in  Mark,  are  the 
contents  of  a  work  consisting  of  the  "oracles,"  or  "sacred 
sayings,"  of  Jesus  which  a  very  ancient  church  writer, 
Papias  the  Bishop  of  Hierapolis,  tells  us  that  Matthew 
compiled.'  Thus  we  get  two  of  our  gospels  well 
authenticated,  Mark  being  admitted  to  be  the  work  of  the 
man  to  whom  it  is  ascribed  and  Matthezv  being  acknowl- 
edged as  in  the  main  a  combination  of  St.  Matthew  the 
Apostle's  collection  of  the  teachings  of  Jesus  with  the 
standard  narrative  in  Mark.  The  infancy  and  resurrec- 
tion narratives  must  have  been  derived  from  other  primi- 
tive authorities. 

The  case  of  our  third  gospel  is  somewhat  different.  As 
we  might  expect  from  his  preface,  St.  Luke  has  availed 
himself  of  a  wider  range  of  materials.     But  he  too,  like 

*See    Pfleiderer,    Urchristentum,    First   Edition    (1887). 

*It  is  interesting  to  observe  that,  as  Eusebius  informs  us,  Papias's  com- 
mentary on  the  Logia,  or  "Oracles  of  the  Lord/'  was  composed  in  five 
books.  These  might  correspond  to  the  five  sections  of  the  teachings  of 
Jesus  in  our  Matthew. 


43  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

the  author  of  our  first  gospel,  is  now  admitted  to  have 
used  Mark  as  his  primary  basis,  though  not  to  so  great 
extent,  or  so  almost  exclusively.  In  particular  in  that  rich 
section  which  is  commonly,  though  perhaps  erroneously, 
ascribed  to  our  Lord's  Persean  ministry,  he  has  a  store  of 
precious  materials  that  are  not  met  with  in  any  other  gos- 
pels. Similarly,  while  some  verbal  coincidences  lead  us  to 
the  conclusion  that  he  also  used  St.  Matthew's  collection 
of  the  sayings  of  Jesus,  it  is  evident  that  he  had  other 
collections  of  our  Lord's  teachings,  from  which,  for 
instance,  he  got  the  parables  of  the  Prodigal  Son  and  of 
the  Good  Samaritan,  and  many  other  choice  utterances  the 
characteristic  beauty  and  originality  of  which  constitute 
their  own  authentication. 

Turning  to  the  Fourth  Gospel,  we  see  that  this  wonder- 
ful book  has  been  subjected  to  the  most  searching  criti- 
cism during  recent  years  with  very  interesting  results. 
Half  a  centur}'  ago  Baur  declared  that  it  could  not  have 
been  written  before  the  Year  A.  D.  160.  Since  then  the 
finding  of  primitive  Christian  Documents^  which  bear 
testimony  to  the  use  of  this  gospel  in  earlier  times, 
together  with  the  proofs  of  its  archaic  character  brought 
out  by  a  comparison  of  its  contents  with  second-century 
literature,  has  forced  the  date  of  its  origin  steadily  back 
and  yet  further  back,  till  the  latest  possible  date  that  can 
be  assigned^  fo  it  is  quite  early  in  the  second  century. 
But  more  than  this,  there  is  a  growing  tendency  to  con- 
nect this  gospel  with  the  son  of  Zebedee.  Some  scholars' 
would  assign  the  actual  writing  of  the  book  to  another 
person,  perhaps  John  the  Elder ;  but  then  they  allow  that 
this  somewhat  shadowy  personage,  referred  to  by  Papias 
as  a  contemporary  of  the  Apostles,  derived  his  informa- 

*  Especially   Hipollytus    The  Refutation   of  All  Heresies,   and   Tatian's 
Diatessaron. 

*E.  g.,  Harnach,  McGiffert. 


INTRODUCTION  TO  NEW  TESTAMENT  43 

tion  from  the  Beloved  Disciple.  One  leading  scholar* 
holds  that  the  teachings  of  Jesus  in  our  Fourth  Gospel 
came  from  the  Apostle  John,  while  he  thinks  that  most 
of  the  narrative  portions  are  due  to  another  hand.  But 
in  one  of  the  latest  works  on  the  subject,  Dr.  Drummond 
ascribes  the  whole  book  to  the  Apostle  and  meets  the 
adverse  views  of  recent  criticism  with  masterly  replies. 
Even  if  the  final  verdict  should  be  to  ascribe  the  literary 
form  of  the  work  to  John  the  Elder  or  some  unknown 
scholar  at  Ephesus,  the  growing  consensus  of  opinion  is 
toward  assigning  the  substance  of  it  to  St.  John  himself. 
The  same  period  has  seen  a  reasonable  change  in  the 
critical  treatment  of  the  Acts  of  the  Apostles.  The 
"Tubingen  School,"  represented  in  this  case  especially 
by  Zeller,  the  author  of  well-known  works  on  Greek 
philosophy,  had  treated  the  book  as  altogether  a  fancy 
picture  of  early  church  history  designed  to  reconcile  the 
two  opposite  parties  of  St.  Paul  and  the  elder  Apostles 
by  means  of  the  compromise  of  Catholicism.  That  theory 
is  now  extinct,  and  recent  research  has  gone  a  long  way 
to  vindicate  the  trustworthiness  of  the  book,  partly  by 
showing  the  primitive  character  of  the  first  half — espe- 
cially as  illustrated  by  the  speeches  of  St.  Peter  and 
others,^  and  later  by  the  collection  of  many  evidences  of 
the  historicity  of  the  second  portion  of  the  book,  namely, 
that  containing  the  missionary  journeys  of  St.  Paul.  We 
owe  it  especially  to  the  brilliant  studies  of  Prof.  Ramsay 
— the  greatest  living  authority  on  the  antiquities  and 
history  of  Asia  I\Iinor  in  the  first  century — that  many 
local  and  contemporary  facts  have  been  brought  to  light 
confirmatory  of  the  accuracy  of  St.  Luke  as  a  historian.' 


^Wendt. 

'See  Lechler,  Apostolic  and  Post-Apostolic  Times. 

•See  Ramsay,  St.  Paul  the  Traveller  and  the  Roman  Citizen, 


44  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

With  regard  to  St.  Paul's  epistles  the  case  stands  thus: 
A  few  extremists  reject  them  all,  partly  on  the  ground 
of  their  supposed  inconsistency  with  the  Acts — thus 
reversing  Zeller's  argument,  but  mainly  because  of  the 
advanced  condition  of  Christian  experience  which  they 
illustrate,  as  though  the  pace  of  spiritual  development  in 
the  white  heat  of  the  greatest  religious  ''revival"  the 
world  has  ever  seen  could  be  measured  by  the  ideas  of  a 
Dutch  professor  in  his  chill  lecture  room !  But  the  mass 
of  critical  opinion — British,  German,  and  American — is 
tending  toward  a  wider  recognition  of  the  genuineness  of 
these  writings  than  was  allowed  a  generation  ago.  Baur's 
admittedly  authentic  group  of  four,  which  has  been  called 
"the  great  quadrilateral  of  Christianity,"  still  stands — viz., 
I  and  2  Corinthians,  Galatians  and  Romans.  Next  come 
Philip  plans  and  /  Thessalonians  now  accepted  as  virtually 
beyond  question.  Then  Colossians  has  been  vindicated  in 
schools  of  severe  criticism.^  If  Colossians  is  allowed, 
there  can  be  no  doubt  as  to  receiving  its  companion 
epistle,  the  beautiful  little  letter  to  Philemon.  There  are 
still  many  who  are  unable  to  admit  2  Thessalonians, 
chiefly  because  of  its  apocalyptic  contents.  But  of  late 
years  it  has  been  shown  that  the  primitive  church  was 
possessed  with  the  hope  of  the  coming  of  Christ 
in  glory  to  a  remarkable  extent,  as  a  perfectly 
dominating  idea.  There  remains  Ephesians  as  now 
the  most  questioned  of  all  the  epistles  that  bear  the 
name  of  St.  Paul,  except  the  Pastorals.  But  when  it  is 
seen  that  one  of  the  chief  objections  to  it  is  that  it  is  said 
to  be  "a  weak''  (!)  imitation  of  Colossians  we  may  be 
allowed  to  regard  this  judgment  as  a  matter  of  personal 


*By  Von  Soden  and  Jiilicher,  although  some  interpolations  are  allowed. 
Even  Pfleiderer  admitted  that  it  contained  fragments  of  St.  Paul's  genuine 
writings,  after  Hilgenfeld  had  followed  his  leader  Baur  in  rejecting  it  alto- 
gether.    Lightfoot,  T.  K.  Abbott,  Zahn,  and  Sanday  all  defend  its  claims. 


INTRODUCTION  TO  NEW  TESTAMENT  45 

taste  rather  than  a  decision  of  objective  criticism. 
Luther  does  not  stand  alone  in  holding  this  epistle  to  be 
one  of  the  choicest  books  of  the  New  Testament. 

The  question  of  the  Pastoral  Epistles  must  be  con- 
sidered as  still  one  meeting  with  doubtful  answers.  Many 
scholars  who  accept  all  the  ten  epistles  of  St.  Paul  to  the 
Churches  agree  with  Marcion  of  the  second  century  in 
not  admitting  these  three  works.  Still  they  are  defended 
by  most  British  and  American  New  Testament'  scholars, 
and  some  who  do  not  allow  that  in  their  present  form 
they  can  be  attributed  to  the  Apostle  still  admit  that  they 
contain  fragments  of  the  Apostle's  genuine  writings." 

The  Epistle  to  the  Hebrews  is  now  universally  admit- 
ted not  to  be  a  work  of  St.  Paul.  The  book  itself  makes 
no  claim  to  be  such,  and  it  is  unfortunate  that  the  English 
Revisers  retained  the  misleading  title  ascribing  it  to 
"Paul  the  Apostle,"  a  late  superscription  of  no  histor- 
ical value.  Happily  the  American  Revisers  have  struck  this 
out.  Claims  for  Barnabas  and  for  Apollos  as  its  author 
have  their  advocates;  and  lately  Prof.  Harnach  has 
hit  on  the  happy  guess,  backed  up  by  considerations  of 
some  amount  of  probability,  that  its  author  was  a  woman 
— Priscilla.  But  most  scholars  feel  it  necessary  to  abide 
by  Origen's  negative  conclusion:  "Who  wrote  the  epistle 
God  only  knows."  That  it  is  a  most  valuable  work  oi 
high  inspiration  well  worthy  of  a  place  in  the  canon  in 
spite  of  its  anonymity  cannot  be  doubted.  It  has  recently 
received  special  attention  from  scholars  in  the  form  of 
fresh  and  luminous  exposition." 


*Not  by  Davidson,  however,  nor  more  recently  by  Bacon  or  Moffatt. 
Dr.  Horton  {Century  Bible)  balances  the  arguments  pro  and  con  and  refuses 
to  decide  either  way. 

■This  is  Harnach's  view.  On  the  other  hand  so  independent  a  scholar 
and  drastic  a  critic  as  Mr.  Conybeare  told  the  present  writer  that  he  had 
no  doubt  of  their  genuineness. 

■Especially  by  Menegoz,  Bruce,  and  Milligan. 


'46  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

I  Peter  has  been  somewhat  severely  handled  in  recent 
times,  Harnach  regarding  it  as  the  work  of  some  un- 
known disciple  of  St.  Paul.  But  the  growing  perception 
of  a  rapprochement  between  the  two  great  Apostles,  which 
is  seen  in  recent  scholarship,  points  to  the  conclusion  that 
St.  Peter,  who  was  evidently  a  man  of  a  most  impression- 
able nature,  may  not  have  felt  himself  above  receiving 
influences  from  the  great  Apostle  of  the  Gentiles ;  and  it  is 
not  to  be  denied  that  there  are  features  of  the  epistle 
which  link  it  more  closely  with  St.  Peter's  speeches  in 
Acts  than  with  the  writings  of  St.  Paul.  On  the  other 
hand  2  Peter  is  the  one  book  of  the  New  Testament  now 
almost  universally  treated  as  not  genuine;  it  was  the 
latest  to  be  accepted  in  the  primitive  church.^ 

James  is  regarded  as  a  genuine  work  of  the  head  of  the 
Church  at  Jerusalem  by  its  chief  English  commentator,' 
although  most  German  and  American  scholars  who  have 
written  about  it  recently  assign  it  to  a  very  late  date.' 

The  Epistles  of  John  are  now  almost  universally 
admitted  to  be  the  work  of  the  author  of  the  fourth 
gospel.  Little  can  be  said  as  to  the  Epistle  of  J  tide 
except  that  its  free  use  of  Apocryphal  books  has  been 
clearly  demonstrated.  But,  lastly,  a  flood  of  light  has 
been  thrown  on  the  Revelation  by  recent  studies  in 
Jewish  Apocalyptic  literature,  and  even  in  Babylonian 
mythology.*  It  has  been  shown  that  this  mysterious 
book,  which  many  had  regarded  as  unique  in  litera- 
ture, may  be  associated  with  a  school  of  Jewish  and 
Christian     Apocalyptic     writings     from     some    of    the 


^Still  it  is  vindicated  by  Dr.  Bigg,  International  Commentary. 

2J,  B.  Mayor,   The  Epistle  of  St.  James. 

'E.  g.,  Pfleiderer,  Holtzmann,  Jiilicher,  Harnach,  the  last  regarding 
it  as  a  collection  of  sermon  notes  put  together  by  some  unknown  James 
in  the  second  century.  But  are  not  its  very  archaic  features  against  this 
view? 

*As  expounded  by  Gunkel,  Bousset,  and  CharleSc 


INTRODUCTION  TO  NEW  TESTAMENT  47 

former  of  which  it  draws  its  materials.  Then,  as  the 
inquiry  is  pushed  further  back,  some  of  the  most  re- 
markable imagery  is  traced  through  these  Jewish 
writings  to  Babylonian  legends.  While  this  interest- 
ing process  may  help  to  account  for  the  form  of  the 
book,  it  does  not  touch  its  essence  and  that  marvelous 
inspiration  by  virtue  of  which  it  soars  above  all  pos- 
sible rivals  and  it  is  to  us  the  Apocalypt,  the  one  book  in 
which  the  Spirit  of  God  unveils  the  springs  and  pur- 
poses of  the  providence  of  history. 

IV. — EXEGESIS 

During  recent  years  the  methods  of  the  commen- 
tator have  undergone  almost  as  great  a  revolution  as 
those  of  the  critic.  New  dictionaries  and  grammars* 
have  helped  to  a  more  accurate  understanding  of  words 
and  phrases.  But  the  most  remarkable  contribution 
to  this  form  of  study  comes  from  a  wholly  new  region, 
the  region  of  contemporary  records.  Inscriptions  in 
Greece  and  Asia  Minor  and  Papyri  discovered  in 
Eg}'pt,  dating  from  the  very  time  when  the  New  Tes- 
tament was  written,  are  found  to  contain  phrases 
identical  with  what  we  had  been  accustomed  to  regard 
as  peculiarly  characteristic  of  Hellenistic  or  New  Tes- 
tament Greek.  The  conclusion  to  be  drawn  from 
these  remarkable  discoveries  is  that  the  books  of  the 
New  Testament  were  written  in  the  ordinary  spoken 
Greek  of  their  day,  the  very  same  form  of  language  in 
which  leases  were  drawn  up  and  private  letters  were 
written  by  people  at  Oxyrhynchus  in  Egypt,  in  which 
inscriptions  were  chiseled  by  sculptors  in  Cos  among 
the  isles  of  Greece.  From  this  we  are  led  to  see  the 
mistake  of  the  old  commentators  in  interpreting  the 


*£.    g.,    Grim-Thayer,    Greek-English    Lexicon    of    the    New    Testament, 
and  Grammars  of  New  Testament  Greek  by  Winer,  Schmiedel  and  by  Blass. 


48  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

New  Testament  by  means  of  their  knowledge  of  the 
classics.  The  consequence  is  that  the  Revised  Version 
must  be  regarded  as  already  partially  out  of  date,  since 
its  committees  were  dominated  by  English  university 
classical  scholarship,  as  represented  by  Dr.  EUicott, 
the  chairman  of  the  English  committee. 

Another  modern  movement  of  research  also  carries 
us  away  from  the  old  classicism.  While  the  New 
Testament  writers  used  the  colloquial  language  of  the 
cosmopolitan  Greek-speaking  people  of  their  day,  they 
were  all,  or  nearly  all,  brought  up  in  Jewish  schools 
and  taught  to  think  in  Jewish  modes  of  thought.  This 
indicates  that  some  of  their  expressions  can  best  be 
interpreted  by  a  knowledge  of  Aramaic,  the  language 
of  Palestine  in  the  time  of  Christ.  And  now  Aramaic 
studies  have  been  brought  in  to  assist  in  the  interpre- 
tation of  the  New  Testament  with  luminous  results.* 

Two  further  characteristics  may  be  observed  in  the 
new  modern  commentaries.^  One  is  a  vigorous  effort 
to  arrive  at  the  original  meaning  of  the  books,  rather  than 
to  the  exclusion  of  any  reference  to  theological  systems 
of  later  date;  in  other  words,  honest  exegesis,  rather 
than  polemical  discussion.  The  other  characteristic 
is  a  broader  method  of  treatment  in  seeking  for  the 
ideas  of  the  sacred  writings  as  more  important  than 
the  minute  study  of  words  which  characterized  the 
scholarship  of  the  last  generation  of  commentators. 
The  older  commentaries  were  mainly  grammatical; 
the  newer  commentaries  are  chiefly  historical,  theo- 
logical or  philosophical.'    In    harmony  with    this  later 


^See  Deissmann,  Bible  Studies;  Dalman,  The  Words  of  Jesus. 

^On  the  whole  the  best  English  and  American  series  of  commentaries 
is  that  known  as  the  International  Critical  Commentary;  the  most  recent 
work  of  smaller  dimensions  is   The  Century  Bible. 

'E.  g.,  Ramsay  on  Galatians,  Wellhausen  on  the  Synoptic  Gospels,  the 
Abbe  Loisy  on  St.  John, 


INTRODUCTION  TO  NEW  TESTAMENT  49 

method  of  exegesis  the  Expositor's  Bible  may  be  re- 
garded as  a  great  commentary  on  the  Holy  Scriptures, 
as  well  as  a  work  of  exposition. 

V. — CONTEMPORANEOUS    HISTORY    AND    THOUGHT 

It  is  no  longer  possible  for  the  fully  equipped  scribe 
who  is  to  bring  out  of  his  treasury  things  new  and  old 
to  be  *'a  man  of  one  book."  While  the  center  of  his 
studies  must  be  the  Scriptures,  he  has  undertaken  to 
explain,  his  very  explanation  of  them  is  largely  de- 
pendent on  his  gleanings  from  other  fields  of  learning. 
Formerly  the  Bible  was  regarded  by  itself  in  dazzling 
isolation,  like  a  statue  set  on  a  pedestal.  Now  we 
discover  that  we  can  see  it  much  better  when  it  stands 
in  its  place,  which  is  not  a  mere  niche  in  the  wall  of 
the  temple  of  humanity,  but  the  central  shrine  of  all 
history.  The  life  and  thought  of  the  world  in  which 
the  New  Testament  first  appeared  must  not  be  treated 
as  the  mere  frame  of  the  picture,  although  even  that 
would  be  something,  for  a  suitable  frame  helps  to  show 
its  contents  to  the  best  advantage.  But  we  should 
rather  think  of  the  circumstances  and  setting  of  the 
gospel  and  apostolic  stories  as  background  and  even 
in  part  foreground  to  the  Christian  revelation.  It 
must  be  confessed  that  sometimes  these  accessories 
are  painted  with  so  much  Pre-raflfaelite  force  and 
color  that  there  is  a  danger  of  missing  the  message  of 
the  picture  owing  to  the  distraction  of  the  accessories. 
A  knowledge  of  the  geography  of  Palestine,  Eastern 
manners  and  customs,  the  state  of  the  Roman  world  at 
the  time  of  Christ,  contemporary  Greek  philosophy, 
and  a  host  of  other  matters  more  or  less  remote  from 
the  central  theme  of  the  New  Testament,  must  not  be 
allowed  to  overshadow  that  central  theme.     The  pic- 


60  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

turesqueness  of  modern  writing  threatens  this  danger ; 
and  modern  writing  is  nothing  if  it  is  not  picturesque. 
But  true  illustration,  such  as  is  aimed  at  in  the  Expos- 
itor's Bible,  goes  deeper.  It  does  not  detract  from  the 
interest  of  the  New  Testament  itself  by  the  mere- 
tricious charms  of  the  surroundings,  a  materializing 
and  secularizing  of  the  sacred  and  spiritual  of  which 
some  of  the  most  popular  modern  Lives  of  Christ  are 
guilty.  On  the  contrary,  it  seeks  to  throw  light  on 
the  New  Testament  itself,  explaining  obscurities,  vivi- 
fying what  had  not  been  fully  realized  before,  setting 
the  whole  picture  before  us  in  warm  colors  of  life. 
Used  in  this  way  the  fruits  of  the  Palestine  Exploration 
Fund  prove  to  be  of  great  value.  Then  scholars  of  con- 
temporary Jewish  life  and  thought  have  enabled 
us  to  see  more  clearly  the  actual  condition  of  the  people 
among  whom  Jesus  lived,^  and  those  who  have  been 
investigating  the  history  and  archaeology  of  the  Roman 
Empire  of  this  period  have  enabled  us  to  see  much 
more  clearly  how  the  Apostles  carried  out  their  wider 
mission,  how  the  first  churches  were  founded  in  the 
larger  world,  and  how  the  primitive  Christian  life  was 
lived  in  the  midst  of  pagan  surroundings.** 

VI. — LIFE  AND  HISTORY  OF  THE  EARLY  CHURCH 

Making  use  of  such  materials  as  have  been  indicated 
above,  several  scholars  have  been  attempting  the 
difficult  task  of  writing  the  Life  of  Christ,'  and  several 
also  the  more  manageable  work  of  giving  an  account 
of  the  history  of  Apostolic  times.     Here  we  see  that 

*See  especially  Schiirer,  The  Jewish  People  in  the  Time  of  Jesus 
Christ;  Edersheim,  Jesus  the  Messiah;  Bousset,  Die  Religion  Des  Juden- 
tunis;   Volz,   Judische  Eschatolagie. 

*See  Mommsen,  Provinces  of  the  Roman  Empire;  Ramsay,  Thf 
Church  in  the  Roman  Empire,  &c. 

^E.  g.,  Geikie,  Farrar,  Edersheim,  Stalker,  Didon,  &c.,  in  popular 
works;  Keim,  Weiss,  Sanday  {Dictionary  of  the  Bible),  Bruce  {Encyclo- 
pcvdia  Biblica),  Oscar  HolUmann,  &C.4  in  critical  studies. 


INTRODUCTION  TO  NEW  TESTAMENT  51 

the  destructive  criticism  which  made  havoc  of  history 
under  the  hands  of  the  famous  "Tubingen  school"  has 
been  almost  entirely  superseded  by  constructive  efforts 
which  have  brought  out  the  circumstances  of  primitive 
times  with  remarkable  clearness.  The  learned,  sober 
studies  of  Hort  in  England',  as  well  as  the  writings  of 
Prof.  Ramsay  already  referred  to;  the  brilliant 
work  of  Weizsacker'  In  Germany;  the  histories  of 
McGififert,'  of  the  school  of  Harnach,  and  of  Prof. 
Bartlet,  a  singularly  judicious  and  discerning  writer,* 
are  among  the  most  prominent  contributions  to  a  right 
understanding  of  the  events  of  the  Apostolic  times. 
Indeed,  it  is  not  too  much  to  say  that  the  research  and 
criticism  of  recent  days  have  brought  us  face  to  face 
with  the  primitive  age  of  Christianity  in  a  manner 
never  attainable  during  any  of  the  intermediate  ages. 
It  is  as  though  we  of  the  twentieth  century  had  gained 
a  height  from  which  we  could  look  across  the  inter- 
vening centuries,  many  of  which  lie  wrapped  in  mist, 
and  see  clear  and  sharp  against  the  horizon  the  blue 
hills  of  the  wonderful  first  century. 

VII. NEW  TESTAMENT  THEOLOGY 

Of  all  the  contributions  to  the  study  of  the  Scriptures 
with  which  research,  scholarship  and  thought  have 
enriched  our  age,  none  are  more  fruitful  than  those  which 
belong  to  the  province  of  Biblical  Theology.  Strange 
as  it  may  appear,  while  the  Bible  has  been  the  final 
authority  appealed  to  in  the  teaching  of  dogmatic 
Theology  all  down  the  ages,  Biblical  Theology  is  a  new 
science,  undreamed  of  by  all  but  comparatively  recent 


*See  The  Christian  Ecclesia    and  Judaistic  Christianity. 
*See  Apostolic   Times. 
'Christianity  in  the  Apostolic  Age. 
*The  Apostolic  Age. 


S2  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

scholars.  The  old  method  was  to  start  with  a  proposi- 
tion, a  thesis,  a  dogma,  and  then  hunt  through  the  Bible 
for  proof  texts.  This  was  the  method  of  the  one 
supremely  great  work  in  Systematic  Theology  which 
Protestantism  has  produced — Calvin's  Institutes.  The 
great  reformer  first  states  his  dogma  and  then  proceeds 
to  marshal  texts  in  proof  of  it,  following  this  process  by 
a  refutation  of  objections  and  an  explaining  away  of 
apparently  adverse  texts.  You  can  prove  anything  in 
that  way.  This  vicious  method  accounts  for  the  fact  that 
all  the  wildest  heresies  and  extravagances  of  fanaticism, 
as  well  as  all  the  great  mutually  opposed  systems  of 
Divinity  that  have  appeared  in  Christendom,  have  been 
able  to  appeal  triumphantly  to  Scripture  in  proof  of  their 
contentions.  Such  a  confusion  of  results  should  have 
been  accepted  as  the  reductio  ad  ahsiirdum  of  the  method. 
But  now  the  new  process  of  the  study  of  Biblical 
Theology  follows  a  more  modest  but  more  scientific 
method.  It  does  not  start  with  any  dogma  which  it  seeks 
to  prove ;  it  even  dispenses  with  the  "working  hypothesis" 
which  science  admits  to  be  legitimate.  It  is  wholly  in- 
ductive. Its  aim  is  simply  to  discover  what  the  Scriptures 
teach,  no  matter  whether  this  should  turn  out  to  be 
favorable  to  preconceived  notions  or  the  reverse.  In 
pursuit  of  this  object  it  seeks  to  divest  the  mind  of  a  mass 
of  irrelevant  and  distracting  notions,  the  accumulation  of 
ages  of  Christian  thinking  and  controversy,  and  work  its 
way  back  to  the  times  in  which  the  several  books  were 
written,  viewing  them  in  the  atmosphere  of  their  origin. 
It  approaches  each  book  rather  from  what  went  before 
than  from  what  came  after,  seeing  that  a  thing  is  usually 
conditioned  by  its  antecedents,  but  never  by  its  sequels. 
Then  it  segregates  the  writings  of  each  school  or  class  of 
teachers,  and  further  the  specific  teaching  of  each  writer. 


INTRODUCTION  TO  NEW  TESTAMENT  r,:? 

Lastly,  it  endeavors  to  discover  the  teaching  of  each  book 
in  its  entirety  and  also  in  its  individuality.  These  points 
were  touched  upon  in  the  opening  of  this  section  of  the 
Introduction:  they  need  to  be  treated  rather  more 
explicitly  before  we  close  because  they  enter  into  the 
more  valuable  characteristics  of  the  Expositor's  Bible. 

The  application  of  this  new  method  of  Biblical 
Theology  to  the  New  Testament  has  been  delightfully 
fruitful  in  results.  First  and  foremost  come  the  studies 
in  the  teachings  of  Jesus  with  which  the  Christian  thought 
of  our  age  has  been  revivified.  The  now  familiar  phrase 
*'back  to  Christ"  has  been  nowhere  better  illustrated  than 
in  the  course  of  these  studies.  It  has  now  become  possi- 
ble to  know  to  a  considerable  extent  what  was  the  actual 
teaching  of  the  Master  detached  from  the  subsequent 
teaching  of  the  disciples ;  and  such  knowledge  must  be 
welcomed  as  of  supreme  importance  even  if  we  allow  that 
the  disciples  were  authorized  and  inspired  teachers  com- 
missioned by  Christ  Himself  to  carry  on  the  revelation 
of  Christian  truth  by  means  of  the  illumination  of  the 
Holy  Spirit  with  which  they  were  endowed.  Every  loyal 
servant  of  Christ  must  attach  primary  importance  to  the 
position,  the  action,  the  sufferings  and  the  very  words 
of  his  Lord  and  Master.  The  teachings  of  Jesus  form 
the  most  valuable  part  of  every  book  that  deals  at  all 
adequately  with  New  Testament  Theology  as  a  whole;' 
but  they  are  also  discussed  in  works  wholly  devoted  to 
this  great  subject."  One  interesting  report  which  has  been 
brought  out  with  peculiar  force  both  by  Beyschlag  and 
by  Wendt  is  the  essential  harmony  between  our  Lord's 


*See  especially  works  on  this  subject  by  Weiss,  Stevens,  Beyschlag, 
Bovon  (French),  Holtzmann  (German);  Vk^ernle,  Beginnings  of  Chris- 
tianity. 

*See  Wendt,  Horton,  on  The  Teachings  of  Jesus;  Tohn  Watson,  The 
Mind  of  the  Master;  Bruce,  The  Kingdom  of  God,  and  The  Training  of 
the   Twelve. 


54  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 

teaching  in  the  synoptic  gospels  and  that  in  John.  Special 
attention  has  lately  been  given  the  teaching  of  Christ 
about  Himself,  and  in  particular  to  the  meaning  of  the 
title,  ''the  Son  of  ]\Ian."  '  There  has  also  been  much  dis- 
cussion about  the  teaching  of  Jesus  in  the  gospels  con- 
cerning the  last  things,  and  Dr.  Charles,  the  greatest 
authority  on  this  subject,  has  set  forth  the  view  that 
Jewish  eschatological  notions  are  here  blended  with  the 
original  teachings  of  Jesus,  while  others  think  that  our 
Lord's  teachings  about  the  Destruction  of  Jerusalem  have 
been  confused  with  His  teachings  about  the  end  of  the 
world  and  the  final  judgment."^ 

The  teachings  of  St.  Paul,  the  greatest  theologian  of 
the  primitive  church,  and  indeed  of  all  ages,  have  received 
searching  investigation  during  recent  years.  They  are 
discussed  with  much  fullness  in  the  books  on  New  Testa- 
ment Theology  as  a  whole  that  have  been  already  referred 
to ;  and  valuable  works  have  been  devoted  to  the  exclusive 
study  of  them.  The  prejudiced  views  of  Baur  having 
been  to  a  great  extent  demolished,  Pfleiderer,  also  of 
"the  left  wing"  of  criticism,  produced  a  powerful  work,* 
in  which  the  ideas  of  the  Apostle  were  subjected  to  a  keen 
but  not  very  sympathetic  analysis.  August  Sabatier* 
contributed  a  brilliant  study  to  the  development  of  the 
ideas  of  the  Apostle  in  the  course  of  his  writings  which 
were  taken  in  historical  order;  and  he  was  followed  by 
the  more  cautious  exposition  of  Prof.  Stevens. 
Other  extremely  useful  writings  on  this  most  fruitful 
theme  have  appeared  from  time  to  time,  as  well  as  special 
monographs  of  Johannine  Theology ."* 

^See  Driver,  Hastings'  Dictionary  of  the  Bible,  article,  "  Son  of  Man." 
*See    Charles,    Jewish   and   Christian   Eschatology ;   and    for   the   latter 
view,  Muirhead,   The  Eschatology  of  Jesus. 
^Paulinism. 
'^ Saint  Paul. 
^See  Stevens  on  this  subject,  axid  the  teachings  of  St.  James. 


INTRODUCTION  TO  NEW  TESTAMENT  55 

The  result  of  all  these  studies  is  that  we  have  now  a 
storehouse  of  collected  information  concerning  the 
specific  teachings  of  the  several  parts  of  the  New  Testa- 
ment, such  as  no  scholarship  of  previous  ages  had 
attempted,  because  the  historical  method  on  which  it  is 
all  based  was  not  practised  until  recently.  Much  of  this 
storehouse  was  at  the  disposal  of  the  writers  of  the 
Expositor's  Bible,  and  many  of  its  treasures  will  be 
found  in  their  volumes,  while  perhaps  it  is  not  too  much 
to  hope  that  these  volumes  themselves  will  be  welcomed 
as  valuable  original  contributions  to  the  same  supremely 
important  study — the  study  of  the  mind  of  Christ  and  the 
thought  of  His  Apostles.  Walter  F.  Adeney. 

Manchester^  March,  1903, 


COMPLETE   INDEX 

TO  THE  EXPOSITOR'S  BIBLE 
TOPICAL  AND   TEXTUAL 


By  S.  G.   AYRES,  B.D. 
Librarian  of  Dreiv    Theological  Seminary^  Madison^  Neiv  Jeney 


PREFATORY    NOTE 

The  value  of  work  like  that  which  follows  requires  no 
argument  to  prove  its  worth.  An  unindexed  book  is  like 
an  unexplored  continent.  It  may  contain  streams  of 
thought  which  might  be  sources  of  power  if  known.  Dia- 
monds and  gold  may  there  be  hidden  away.  The  index  is 
the  explorer's  chart  to  the  undiscovered  country.  The 
great  stores  of  a  work  like  The  Expositor's  Bible  are 
not  realized  until  they  are  tabulated  in  an  index.  The 
chemistry  of  thought  has  produced  many  a  gem  for  this 
great  work.  This  index  will  show  where  they  are.  The 
compiler  has  endeavored  to  make  a  complete,  compre- 
hensive, and  practical  index  to  this  series.  The  index  is 
by  subjects,  texts,  and  authors  quoted. 

It  has  given  me  great  pleasure  to  know  in  this  inti- 
mate way  what  The  Expositor's  Bible  contains.  If 
this  work  shall  help  others  to  the  same  knowledge,  the 
labor  involved  is  worth  while. 

Drew  Theological  Seminary,  S.  G.  Ayres. 

April,  1905. 


HOW  TO  USE  THE  INDEX 

As  an  illustration  of  the  method  by  which  to  use  the 
subject  index,  take  the  first  topic,  Aaron.  The  reference 
to  Aaron  and  his  sons  will  be  found  in  the  volume 
''Numbers"  of  The  Expositor's  Bible,  page  32. 

A  good  illustration  of  the  way  to  use  the  textual  part 
of  the  index  is  found  in  John  XVII,  19.  Of  course  the 
main  treatment  will  be  found  in  its  proper  place  in  Vol. 
II  of  the  Gospel  of  John  by  Dr.  Dods ;  but  we  find  a  refer- 
ence in  the  volume  on  Leviticus,  page  57;  in  that  con- 
taining Ephesians,  page  369;  in  that  on  the  Epistles  of 
Peter,  page  151.  The  reader  will  find  that  these  will  aid 
in  acquiring  a  more  complete  understanding  of  the  text 
studied.  The  inter-relation  of  the  Old  and  New  Testa- 
ments will  be  the  better  noted.  It  has  been  thought  that 
less  trouble  will  be  caused  the  reader  by  having  the  texts 
included  with  the  subjects  under  one  index. 

Where  a  book  of  the  Bible  is  contained  in  more  than 
one  volume,  although  possibly  bound,  the  two  volumes  in 
one,  the  reference,  for  example,  under  Acts  VIT,  verse 
49,  to  Isaiah  II,  2ST,  would  be  found  on  page  287  of  the 
second  volume  of  Isaiah. 


INDEX     TO 
THE    EXPOSITOR'S 


BIBLE 


AARON  and  his  sons,  Numbers,  ;i2. 

and  Moses  meet,  Exodus,  Sy. 

begins  the  Tabernacle  service, 

Leviticus,  219. 

Character  of,  Numbers,  29. 

Close  of  his  life.  Numbers,  235. 

complains  of  the  marriage  of 

Moses,  Numbers,  137. 

Consecration  of,  Leviticus,i8i. 

Consecration  of,  Hebrews,  185. 

Intercession  of.  Numbers,  207. 

Priesthood    of,    Hebrews,    79, 

128. 

Rod  of.  Numbers,  198,  207. 

suggested    as    Moses'     Helper, 

Exodus,  74. 
AARONITES,     Support     of    the. 

Numbers,  25. 
ABBA,    Genesis,    165,    Galatians, 

254- 

ABBOTT,  Dr.  Ezra,  Biblical  Es- 
says, Acts  II.,  12,  43. 

ABECEDARIANS,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 70. 

ABEL,  Genesis,  28-41. 

compared  with  Christ,  Genesis, 

40,  41. 

Faith  of,  Genesis,  35,  36;  He- 
brews,  22y22'^. 

ABERCIUS,  St.,  Acts  I.,  VI. 
ABGAR,  King,  Acts  II.,  53. 
ABIATHAR  deposed.  Kings,  no, 


ABIEZER,  Conversion  of.  Judges 

159- 
ABIGAIL,  wife  of  Nabal,  I.  Samuel, 

384,  II.  Samuel,  39. 

marries  David,  I.  Samuel,  3S8. 

ABIHU,  Strange  fire  ofNadaband, 

Leviticus,    237-255;   Numbers, 

29. 

ABIJAH,  son  of  Jeroboam. 

Sickness  and  death  of,  I.  Kings, 

302308. 

ABIJAH,  king  of  Judah,  I.  Kings, 
318-321;  Chronicles,  2i2S-ZZ7- 

ABIMELECH,  Judges,  210-223. 

ABIRAM,  Dathan  and.  Numbers, 
195,  205. 

ABISHAG,  the  Shunemite,  I. 
Kings,  62,  106;  Songs  of  Solo- 
mon, 4. 

ABISHAI,  II.  Samuel,  245,  345. 

ABOMINABLE,  Altogether  be- 
come, Peter,  31 3-3-24- 

ABNER  assassinated  b}^  Joab,  II. 
Samuel,  52. 

sets  up  Ishbosheth,  II.  Samuel, 

23- 

wars   against   David,  II.  Sam. 

uel,  26-49. 

ABRAHAM  and  the  "cities  of  the 
plain,"  Genesis,   186-197. 

and  Ishmacl,  Genesis,  147-158, 


212-225. 

-and       Melchizedck, 
ii8. 


Hebrews, 


ei 


62 


ABRAHAM— A  CTS 


ABRAHAM,    Blessings    of,    Gala- 

tians,  180-188. 

The  call  of,  Genesis,  81-95. 

Change  of  name,  Genesis,  165. 

Faith    of.    Job,   27;   Hebrews, 

223. 
Friend    of  God,    James,    160, 

162. 
God's  covenant  with,  Genesis, 

134-146. 

God's  oath  to,  Hebrews,  loi. 

in  Egypt,  Genesis,  96-107. 

intercedes  for  Sodom,  Genesis, 

172-185. 
Justification  of,  Romans,  103- 

109,  117-127. 

Legend  of,  Daniel,  44. 

Lot's  separation  from.  Gen- 
esis, 108-120. 

Promise  to,  Hebrews,  9. 

purchases  Macphelah,  Genesis, 

226-239. 

rescues  Lot,  Genesis,  121-1 33. 

sacrifices  Isaac,  Genesis,    198- 

211. 

Seed  of,  Hebrews,  45. 

ABSALOM  and  Amnon,n.  Samuel, 

193-204;  L  Kings,  76. 

Balaam  hke.  Numbers,  322. 

banished  and    brought    back, 

n.  Samuel,  205-216;  I.  Kings, 

77- 

Burial  of,  H.  Samuel,  273. 

David  flees  before,  H.  Samuel, 

229-252. 

David's  grief  for,  H.   Samuel, 

277-288. 

Defeat  and  death  of,  H.  Sam- 
uel, 265-276. 

in  Council,  H.  Samuel,  253-264. 

Pride  of,  H.  Samuel,  211. 


ABSALOM,  Revolt  of,  H.  Samuel, 
217-228;  L  Kings,  79. 

Samson  like,  Judges,  286. 

ABSOLUTION,  Forms  of,  James, 
342- 

ABSTINENCE,  Pledge  of.  Num- 
bers, 60. 

ACCADIAN  PSALMS,  Job,  3. 

ACCEPTANCE  of  God's  forgive- 
ness, Genesis,  38. 

of  ofiering  and  offerer.  Gene- 
sis, 35- 

The  one  way  of  Divine,  Ro- 
mans, 90-99. 

ACHAIA,  The  province.  Acts  II., 
326. 

ACHAN,  Punishment  of,  Joshua, 
177-188. 

Trespass  of,  Joshua,  165-176. 

ACHILLES  TATIUS,  ACTS  II., 
367. 

ACHISH,  king  of  Gath,  I.  Samuel, 
336-340,  396-403. 

ACHSAH,  Judges,  21. 

ACOIMETAEjOr  watching  monks, 
Acts  II.,  176. 

ACTA  SANCTORUM,  Acts  I.,  iir, 
162;  II.,  56,  141,  200,  213, 
247. 

ACTION  a  primal  necessity, 
Judges,  295. 

ACTS,  The  book.  Apocryphal, 
Acts  I.,  2. 

Inspiration  of,  Acts  I.,  28. 

not  by  Paul,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 360-362. 

not  by  Titus,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 207. 

Object    of  the   first    part    of, 

Acts  I.,  346. 

Origin  and  authority,  Acts  I., 

1-22. 

Title,  Acts  I.,  I. 


ACl'S  I.— ACTS  VII. 


ACTS  I.,  I,  Romans,  275. 

2,  9,  Mark,  444. 

4,  5,  Galatians,  253. 

7,  Daniel,  151;  Romans,  363; 

Galatians,  247, 

8,  Leviticus,  216;  Matthew,  67  ; 

Hebrews,    269. 

II,  Romans,  313,  362;  Peter, 

164;  John  Epistles,  82. 

13,     James,     26,     28;      John 

Epistles,  6. 

14,  Ephesians,  423;  James,  35, 

374;  Peter,  108. 

15,  Matthew,  441. 

17,  Peter,  237. 

19,  Luke,  3. 

John  Epistles,  125. 

ACTS  IL,  Leviticus,  461. 

5-11  James,  51. 

10,  Romans,  3. 

16-21,  Revelation,  105. 

17,  18,  Ephesians,  357. 

19,   Peter,  340. 

22,  Peter,  183. 

22i,   24,   Mark,  427;   Romans, 

237;  Peter,  8;  Revelation,  202. 

27,  John  Epistles,  309. 

29,  L  Kings,  103;  Chronicles, 

144. 
30,  IL  Samuel,   107;    Chroni- 
cles, 251;  Hebrews,  35. 

31,  Peter,  140. 

34,  35,  Ephesians,  91. 

38,   n.   Corinthians,  52;   Pas- 
toral Epistles,  287, 

44,  45,  Leviticus,  396. 

ACTS  HI.,  4,  John  Epistles,  6,  7. 

13,  26;  Isaiah  H.,  287. 

14,    Isaiah    IL,    287;    James, 

285. 
16,  James,  67,  116. 


ACTS  HI.,   19  21,  Leviticus,  472, 

511- 

2i>  Revelation,  354. 

21-25,  Romans,  14. 

ACTS  IV.,  13,  John  Epistles,  7. 

19,  Peter,  128. 

24,  Revelation,  99. 

27-30,   Isaiah   II. ,  287;  Mark, 

407. 
ACTS  v.,  13,  John  Epistles,  6. 

17,  James,  198. 

24,  29;  Jeremiah  I.,  412. 

28,  John  Epistles,  293. 

31,  Songs  of  Solomon,  310. 

40,  Jeremiah  I.,  412. 

41,    James,    65,    130;    Peter, 

ACTS  VL,  I,  Peter,  165,  170. 

3,  Peter,  120. 

4-6,  Pastoral  Epistles,  116. 

6,  Pastoral  Epistles,  315. 

10,  James,  193. 

13,  14,  Jeremiah  II. ,  17. 

ACTS    VIL,    5,    Colossians,    t,'&t\ 

Hebrews,   216. 

6,  Exodus,  198. 

20,  II.  Corinthians,  294. 

20,  Hebrews,  239, 

22,    Exodus,    yy,    Ephesians, 

385;  Hebrews,  244. 

26,  James,  251. 

n,  Hebrews,  235. 

38,  Peter,  173. 

42,  Romans,  49. 

47,  Chronicles,  172. 

48,  Jeremiah  IL,  17. 

49,  Isaiah  IL,  460. 

52,  Isaiah  IL,  287. 

52,  James,  286,  294. 

53,  Galatians,   217;  Hebrews, 

23- 


(54                                ACTS  VIL— 

ACTS  XIII. 

ACTS     VII.,     56,     Daniel,     248; 

ACTS  X.,  42,  Peter,  183. 

Mark,  52. 

43,  Romans,  14. 

58,  Galatians,  62. 

44,  Galatians,  171-173. 

ACTS  VIII. ,  1-3,  Galatians,  62. 

45,  Twelve  Prophets  II. 

428. 

4,  Romans,  346. 

47,  Ephesians,  55. 

14,  John  Epistles,  6,  7. 

ACTS  X:i.,  5,  II.  Corinthians 

,  191. 

17,  Pastoral  Epistles,  167,  315. 

8,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  . 

495- 

20-22,  Galatians,  49. 

15-18,    Galatians,    171, 

173; 

22,  Peter,  62. 

Ephesians,  59. 

26,    Psalms    III.,    161;   Ephe- 

17,  Galatians,  121,  204 

255- 

sians,  239. 

19,  21,  Galatians,  91. 

2?>,  Isaiah  II.,  6. 

25,  26,  Galatians,  91. 

30,  Isaiah  II.,  287. 

26,  Peter,  169,  190. 

39,  II.  Corinthians,  347. 

27-30,  Galatians,  93,  102. 

ACTS  IX.,  I, Galatians,  62;  James, 

2^,  Hebrews,  318. 

126. 

29,  Peter,  120. 

1-19,  Galatians,  58. 

ACTS    XII.,    2,     Matthew, 

240; 

2,  James,  48,  127. 

James,  26. 

4,  Daniel,  262. 

II,  Daniel,  228. 

7,  Daniel,  ?94. 

17,  James,  26,  35. 

10-19,  Galatians,  71. 

20,  I.  Kings,  152. 

15,  Romans,  12. 

20-23,  Daniel,  198. 

16,  II.  Corinthians,  231. 

22,  2  2^,  Daniel,  51. 

17,  Pastoral  Epistles,  315. 

24,  Peter,  58. 

19-25,  Galatians,  79. 

Z2i,  Luke,  346. 

25,  Mark,  206. 

ACTS   XIII.,    1-4,    Exodus, 
Romans,  434. 

409; 

26,  27,  Galatians,  81;  James, 

2,  3,  Mark,  63 ;  Galatians 

,100. 

35- 

3,  Exodus,  67;  Pastoral 

Epis- 

30,  Peter,  120. 

ties,  167,  315. 

34,  James,  329. 

10,  James,  184. 

39,  41,  Pastoral  Epistles,  163, 

15,  Mark,  21. 

43,  Peter,  169. 

21,  Joshua,  320. 

ACTS  X.,  2,  8,  Romans,  19. 

26,  Ephesians,  6;  Peter, 

65. 

4,  Leviticus,  yy. 

2,2,  Ephesians,  55. 

10,  II.  Corinthians,  191. 

2,2>,  Psalms  L,    i,    18; 

Ephe- 

14,  Daniel,  133. 

sians,  93. 

20,  James,  i^,  122. 

2,6,  Romans,  243. 

34j  35j  Ezra,  22;  Daniel,  323. 

39,  Revelation,  loi. 

38,   Leviticus,   202  ;    John  I., 

43,  45,  46,  Galatians,  100. 

41. 

47,  Isaiah  II.,  288. 

^41,  42,  John  Epistles,  243. 

50,  Thessalonians,  163. 

A  CIS  XIV.— ACTS  XIX. 


ACTS  XIV.,  4,  14,  II.  Corinthians, 
J31;     Galatians,     12;    Ephe- 

biaius,  239. 

II,  i:?,  nanicl,  50. 

12,  Galatians,  100. 

14,  15,  Daniel,  165. 

15,  17,  Galatians,  267;  Peter, 

49. 

17,  Ephesians,  271. 

■ 2Ti,     Pastoral     Epistles,    59; 

Peter,  202. 
ACTS  XV.,  2,  12,  Galatians,  100, 

102. 

• 3,  Galatians,  93. 

7,  Galatians,  123. 

10,  Galatians,  2>'^7. 

II,  Galatians,  151. 

12,  II,  Corinthians,  362. 

13,  James,  26,  35. 

15-17,  Peter,  74. 

21,  James,  103. 

22,  Pastoral  Epistles,  394. 

2T^,  24,  Galatians,  91,  no. 

24,  Philippians,  176. 

28,  Galatians,  106. 

29,  Daniel,  165. 

12,  Peter,  230. 

36-40,  Galatians,  100. 

39,  Philippians,  3. 

41,  Galatians,  91. 

ACTS  XVI.,  1-3,  Galatians,  305, 

319- 

3,  Galatians,  62. 

6,  Galatians,    17;  Thessaloni- 

ans,  38. 

6-10,  Romans,  30;  Peter,  229. 

9,  II.  Corinthians,  348;  Gala- 
tians, 67;  Pastoral  Epistles, 
242. 

15,    Philippians,    358;    Peter, 

169. 


ACTS  XVI.,  17,  Daniel,  179. 

22t,  24,  Jeremiah  I.,  412. 

ACTS  X\TI.,  4,  Thessalonians,  3. 

5,  Romans,  434. 

6,  Galatians,  329. 

7,  Peter,  169. 

12,  Thessalonians,  163. 

18,  II.  Kings,  303;  Peter,  183. 

19,  John  Epistles,  293. 

22  31,  Galatians,  267. 

26,  Chronicles,  49;  Daniel,  2"^, 

151;  Ephesians  2i\  Thessa- 
lonians, 187. 

2^,  John  Epistles,  107. 

2?,,  Pastoral  Epistles,  224. 

29,  Exodus,  296. 

30,   I.   Kings,  101;  Galatians, 

258;  Ephesians,  269. 

ACTS  XVIII.,  2,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 414. 

9,  II.  Corinthians,  348;  Gala. 

tians,  67. 

18,  Leviticus,  551;  Galatians, 

320;  John  Epistles,  18. 

22,    2^,    Galatians,    91,    132, 

327. 

25,  Ephesians,  277. 

26,  Romans,  427;  Peter,  loS. 

ACTS  XIX.,  1-7,  Ephesians,  277. 

6,  Pastoral  Epistles,  167,  315. 

10,  Ephesians,  15. 

13-20,  Pastoral  Epistles,  ;^&^. 

15,  Luke,  155. 

18,  19,  Ephesians,  342. 

19,  20,  John  Epistles,  21. 

20,   Peter,   58;  John  Epistles, 

15- 

21,  Romans  II. 

22,  Pastoral  Epistles,  415. 

24,  ^8,  John  Epistles,  18. 

26,  27,  John  Epistles,  275,  303. 


66 


A  CTS  XIX.— A  CTS  OF  PA  UL 


ACTS  XIX.,  29,  John  Epistles, 
301. 

Til,  Pastoral  Epistles,  413. 

34,  Pastoral  Epistles,  394. 

55,  Pastoral  Epistles,  84. 

ACTS  XX.,  2,  6,  Philippians,  4. 

4,   Romans,    434;    Ephesians, 

433;  Colossians,  387;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  415. 

John  Epistles,  301, 

17,  Peter,  202. 

18-35,  Ephesians,  277. 

28,     Exodus,    175;    Romans, 

261;  Ephesians,  368. 

29,  30,  Ephesians,  412;  Thes- 

salonians,  309;  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 302,  376. 

30,  John  Epistles,  42. 

31,  Romans,   278;  Ephesians, 

14;  John  Epistles,  19. 

ACTS  XXI.,  8,  Ephesians,  239. 

9,  Peter,  108. 

13,  Romans,  419. 

15,  16,  Galatians,  93. 

1 7,  James,  35;  John  Epistles, 7. 

17-25,  Galatians,  130. 

18,  James,  26. 

20,  26,  Galatians,  62,  320. 

21,  Ephesians,  65. 

24-26,  Leviticus,  551. 

27-30,  Jeremiah  II.,  16;  Gala- 
tians, 106;  Ephesians,  404. 

28,  29,  Ephesians,  433. 

29,  Colossians,  m\  Pastoral 

Epistles,  415. 

38,  Galatians,  i'^^'^- 

ACTS  XXII.,  3,  Galatians,  63; 
Ephesians,  385. 

4,  Pastoral  Epistles,  55. 

5-16,  Galatians,  58. 

6,  Galatians,  311. 


ACTS,  XXII., 1 2-2 1,  Galatians,  ;i. 

14,  Pastoral  Epistles,  59. 

16,  Pastoral  Epistles,  287. 

17,  11.  Corinthians,  348;  Gala- 
tians, 67. 

21,  Galatians,  90. 

22,  Galatians,  455. 

ACTS  XTXIII.,  2-5,  Galatians,  278. 

6,  Romans,  84;  Galatians,  62; 

Peter,  182. 

II,  Romans,  ^y. 

ACTS  XXIV.,  15,  Galatians,  311. 

20,  21,  Romans,  84. 

ACTS  XXVI.,  5,  Philippians,  186. 

6-8,  Galatians,  311. 

7,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  408; 

John  Epistles,  19. 

II,  James,  127. 

12-18,  Galatians,  58. 

13,  Revelation,  304. 

14,  Jeremiah  I.,  95;  Romans, 

428:  Galatians,  64. 

18,  Ephesians,  43,  402. 

20,  Romans,  412;  Galatians, 

93- 
ACTS  XXVII.,  1 1,  Colossians,  m, 

387. 

3,  John  Epistles,  309. 

21,  Pastoral  Epistles,  242. 

24,  Pastoral  Epistles,  68. 

26,  29,  Peter,  374. 

ACTS  XXVIII.,  6,  Daniel,  50. 

16,  Philippians,  47. 

17,  Romans,  69. 

21,  Galatians,  421. 

22,  Philippians,  49. 

21,  Daniel,  98;  Romans,  15. 

2^,  Ephesians,  52. 

30,  Pastoral  Epistles,  361. 

ACTS  OF  PAUL  AND  THECLA, 

John  Epistles,  91. 


ADAM—AHAZ 


67 


ADAM,  Genesis,    16-27;   Hebrews, 

220. 
Christ  and,  Romans,  143-155; 

Hebrews,  36. 
ADAM  OF  SAINT  VICTOR,  John 

Epistles,  5,  69,  7^^  184. 
ADONIZAHandAbishag,  I.  Kings, 

105. 

RebeUion  of,  I.  Kings,  81,  93. 

slain,  I.  Kings,  109. 

ADONIZEDEK,  king  of  Jerusalem, 

Joshua,  223;  Judges,  12. 
ADORAM,  I.  Kings,  143. 
ADORNMENT,  Nature  of.  Pastoral 

Epistles,  251,  252. 
ADULLAM,  The  cave  of,  David  in, 

I.  Samuel,  341-344. 
ADULTERY,   Eyes  full  of,   Peter, 

305- 

a    form   of  murder,   Leviticus, 

426. 

Prohibition  of.   Exodus,    319, 

321;  Leviticus,  Z^6;  Deuter- 
onomy, 95,  400;  Matthew,  75. 

Spiritual,  James,  227. 

ADVENTURER,  The,  Judges,  211- 

ADVICE  of  Samuel,  I.  Samuel, 
182. 

AELIUS  CALLUS,  James,  t,2^. 

AENEAS,  Acts  IL,  97. 

AESCHYLUS,  Ecclesiastes,  46; 
Jeremiah  I.,  28S;  David,  224. 

AFFECTION  Natural,  right, 
Leviticus,  249. 

AFFLICTION,The  man  that  hath 
seen,    Song  of  Solomon,    180- 

193- 
AFRICA,   Mission   in,   Thessaloni- 

ans,  157,  158. 
AFRICAN  SLAVERY  and  Hebrew 

compared.  Exodus,  342. 


AGABUS,    the  Prophet,   Acts  1 1., 

162,  426,  434. 
AGAPE,  The,  Acts  II. ,  399,  400; 
F.phesians,    342;   James,   427, 
432;  Peter,  304. 
AGAG,  Numbers,  307. 

killed    by    Samuel,  I.   Samuel, 

250. 
AGASSIZ,  Proverbs,  144. 
AGED,  The,   Beautiful    life    of,    L 
Kings,  61. 

Joshua  the,  Joshua,  250. 

Reverence  for,  Leviticus,  412. 

AGES  OF  FAITH,  Joshua,  139. 

AGNOSTICISM,      Judges,      346; 

Job,      117;      Matthew,      164; 

Ephesians,  255;  Hebrews,  235, 

AGRICULTURE,    Proverbs,    140^ 

269. 
AGRIPPA  IL,  Acts  IL,  432,  448. 
AGUR   SON  OF  JAKEH   quoted, 
Genesis,  150. 

Words  of,   Proverbs,  386-395. 

AHAB,  King  of  Israel,   and  Ben- 
hadad,  I.  Kings,  451-462. 

and  Elijah,  I.  Kings,  2i77-2i^'2' 

and  Herod  compared,    Mark, 

171. 

and  Jehosaphat,  I.  Kings,  485. 

and  Jezebel,  I.  Kings,  347-356. 

and     Naboth's      vineyard,    I. 

Kings,  473-483- 

and  the  rain,   I.   Kings,    399- 

403. 

Death  of,  I.  Kings,   494,  495. 

Infatuation   of,  I.  Kings,  462. 

AHASUERUS,     Ezra,     153,     155, 
Z'^^,  361,  370,  382,  396,  399. 
AHAZ,  king  of  Judah,   II.    Kings, 
260-264;  Isaiah  I.,  98. 

Apostasies  of,  II.  Kings,  272- 

285. 


68 


A  HA  Z—A  MB  ROSE 


AHAZ.    compared    with     Charles 

I.,  Isaiah,  99,   103,  113. 
Isaiah    and,    II.    Kings,    265- 

2-J2, 

the  Judas   of  the    Old    Testa. 

ment,  Isaiah  I.,   118. 
a  wicked  king.  Chronicles,  200- 

220. 
AHAZIAH,     king    of    Israel,    II. 

Kings,  3-18. 
AHAZIAH,    king    of    Judah,    II. 

Kings,  102-105,  1 18-120. 

Chronicles,  399-401. 

AHIJAH  of  Shiloh  and  Jeroboam, 

I.  Kings,  252-259. 
and  the  wife  of  Jeroboam,  I. 

Kings,  302. 
AHIMAAZ,  messenger  to  David,  II. 

Samuel,  2^?^. 
AHIMELECK  and  David,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 332-340;  II.  Samuel,  129, 
slain  by  Saul,  I.  Samuel,  346- 

353- 
AHINOAM     the    Jezreelitess,    II. 

Samuel,  39. 
AHITHOPHEL  and  Absalom,  II. 

Samuel,  225,  22,6,  256. 
counsellor  of  David,   II.  Sam- 
uel, 131;  Psalm  II.,  32,  159. 

Suicide  of,  II.  Samuel,  261. 

AHOLIAB,  Exodus,  426  sq. 

AI,    Joshua  defeated   at,   Joshua, 

168. 

captured,  Joshua,  189-200. 

ALABARCH,  Acts  II.,  81,  153. 
ALARIC,  Hebrews,  272. 
ALBINUS,  James,  40. 
ALEXANDER    the    Coppersmith, 

Acts  II.,  T^-j^. 
ALEXANDER     and    Hymenaeus, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  75,  76,  2)72i^ 

413. 


ALEXANDER  the  Great,    Daniel, 

156;  James,  163. 

and  Jaddua,  Daniel,  103-106. 

ALFORD,  Henry,  Ephesians,  439; 

Thessalonians,   74,   316;   Pas- 
toral Epistles,  392;  James,  2^2, 

399,  418;  Revelation,  351. 
ALFRED  the  Great  influenced  by 

Moses,  Exodus,  262. 
ALLEGORICAL     INTERPRETA- 
TION of  the  Song  of  Solomon, 

Song  of  Solomon,  42. 
ALMOND  TREE,  Fruit  of,  Ecclesi- 

astes,  268;  Jeremiah  I.,  62. 
ALPHEUS,  James,  2^. 
ALMS-GIVING,  Matthew,  80-82. 
ALTAR,    The,  in  Judaism,   Ezra, 

51;  Hebrews,  ^i^T^. 
ALTAR  ED,  Joshua,  365-375- 
ALTAR  OF  THE  TABERNACLE, 

Exodus,  395;  Joshua,  206. 
ALTUS,  centurion.  Acts  I.,  no. 
AMALEK,       Exodus,       252-258; 

Numbers,   312;     Joshua,     25; 

Judges,  78,  79;  I.Samuel,  245; 

I.  Samuel,  425. 
AMASA  killed  by  Joab,  II.  Samue!, 

320. 
supersedes  Joab,   II.     Samuel, 

292. 
AMASIS,  James,  173. 
AMAZIAH  the  priest,  and  Amos, 

Twelve  Prophets  I.,  11 5-1 20. 
AMAZIAH,    king    of    Judah,    II. 

Kings,     167-174;     Chronicles, 

412-417. 
AMBITION    disclaimed    by    Paul. 

Thessalonians,  74. 
AMBROSE,       Pastoral      Epistle?, 

230. 


AMEN— 

AMOS   V. 

09 

AMEN,  Kucharistic,  Acls  II.,  jyO; 

AMOS  L,  7,  8,  II.  Kings,  194. 

James,  470. 

1 1 ,  II.  Kings,  1 39,  1 7 1 ;  Tw 

•elve 

AMI  EL,   Henri    Frederic,    quoted. 

Prophets  IL,  176. 

Job,   8S,   288;   John   Epistles, 

13,  II.  Kings,  221. 

15S. 

AMOS    IL,    I,   II.   Kings,    7,7, 

39, 

AMMIEL  of  Lo-  debar,  II.  Samuel, 

139;  Jeremiah  I,  315. 

249. 

4-8,  Jeremiah  IL,  276. 

AMMIANUS    MARCEL  LIN  US, 

5,  II.  Kings,   194. 

Acts  II.,  152. 

6-13,  II.  Kings,  194. 

AMMONITES,  Judges,   230,   240- 

7,  Ezekiel,  312. 

245;  I.  Samuel,  170,  175;   II. 

8,  Deuteronomy,  415. 

Samuel,      146-157;     Jeremiah 

II,  IL  Kmgs,  134. 

II.,     242;    Ezekiel,    169,    170, 

14,  Psalms  III.,  407. 

224,  226;  Twelve  Projjhcts  I., 

AMOS  III.,    I,    Jeremiah    I., 

79; 

Ur- 

Ezekiel,  190. 

AMNON,  Absalom  and,  IL  Samuel, 

2,    Leviticus,   246;   II.    Kings, 

193,  204;  L  Kings,  76,  yy. 

198;    Jeremiah    II. ,   214; 

Ro- 

AMON,  king  of  Judah,  II.   Kings, 

mans,  2&7,. 

2>7T--Z7l- 

6,    Twelve  Prophets  IL, 

^2>7, 

AMORITES,  Numbers,    157,  253; 

316. 

Judges,  64. 

8,  Ezekiel,  50. 

Israel  defeats    the,     Numbers, 

9-15,  II.  Kings,  196. 

255- 

14,  II.  Kings,  194. 

AMOS  the  prophet  and  his   min- 

 15,  L  Kings,  495. 

istry.  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  io6- 

AMOS  IV.,  I,  Ezekiel,  312. 

120. 

1-3,  IL  Kings,  218. 

and  Israel,  II.  Kings,  193-203. 

1-13,  II.  Kings,  196. 

the     man    and    the    prophet, 

13,  Jeremiah  IL,  288. 

Twelve  Prophets  I.,  73-120. 

6,  II.  Kings,  193. 

Problem  left  by.  Twelve  Proph- 

 7,  8,  IL  Kings,  193- 

ets   I.,    22-J-22,\. 

9,  II.  Kings,  193;  Jcremia 

hL, 

AMOS  the  Book,  Twelve  Prophets 

180. 

I.,  61-231. 

10,   IL   Kings,    193;  Jeremiah 

contents,       authority,        etc., 

I.,  102. 

Twelve  Prophets  I.,  61-72. 

II,  IL  Kings,  193,  194. 

Period  of,  Twelve  Prophets  I., 

12,  IL  Kings,  200. 

65. 

AMOS  v.,  2,  Song  of  Solomon, 

65. 

AMOS  I.,    I,  IL  Kings,  194,  196. 

8,  Jeremiah  I.,  2i,t^,  287. 

2,  Jeremiah  I.,  76. 

9,  Jeremiah  I.,  184. 

3,  4.  II.  Kings,  142. 

10,  Jeremiah  I.,  392. 

6-15,  II.  Kings,   143. 

1 1,  I.  Kings,  279. 

(0 


AMOS  v.— ANGELS 


AMOS  v.,  15,  Genesis,  212. 

18,    20,    Jeremiah    II.,    308; 

Peter,  328. 

19,  Ecclesiastes,  242. 

• 21-23,  I-  Kings,  212. 

25,  26,  Acts  I.,  310. 

26,  II.  Kings,  256. 

AMOS  VI.,  1-14,  II.  Kings,  197. 

2,  II.  Kings,  191. 

4,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  371, 

4-6,  I.  Kings,  279. 

7,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  155. 

14,  II.  Kings,  191,  414. 

AMOS  VII.,  I,  II.  Kings,  193, 
197. 

4,  II.  Kings,  193. 

9,  II.  Kings,  200. 

12,  II.  Kings,  426. 

16,  Jeremiah  I.,  414. 

AMOS  VIII.,  I,  II.  Kings,  203. 

2,  II.  Kings,  217;  Ezekiel,  72. 

5 ,  Leviticus,  415;  Numbers,  3  5  ; 

Isaiah  II.,  420;  Jeremiah  I., 
368,  370;  Ezekiel,  450. 

7,  Jeremiah  I.,  84. 

8,  II.  Kings,  194. 

9,  Jeremiah  I.,  293. 

AMOS  IX.,  1-3,  Revelation,  115. 

3,  Joshua,  177;  I.  Kings,  379. 

5,  6,  Jeremiah  I.,  233. 

7,  Jeremiah  I.,  126. 

9,  10,  II.  Kings,  203. 

II,  Ezekiel,  314;  Acts  II.,  242. 

11-15,    II.    Kings,    201,    203; 

Chronicles,  144;  Peter,  74. 

12,  James,  129. 

13,  Ezekiel,  486. 

14,  Jeremiah  II.,  329. 

AMUSEMENT  QUESTION,  The, 
Genesis,  22.  64,  324;  Deuter- 
onomy, 195-196;  Judges,  310; 


Jeremiah  I.,  2,22;  I.  Corinthi- 
ans, 188;  Pastoral  Epistles, 
102. 

ANACLETUS,  Pastoral  Epistles, 
416. 

ANAK,  Sons  of.  Numbers,  157; 
Joshua,  246,  247,  273. 

ANANIAS  AND  SAPHIR.\,  Acts 
I.,  211-228;  Pastoral  Epistles, 

72,,  75- 

ANANIAS  OF  DAMASCUS,  Acts 
n.,  53,  54,  55,  57,58,59,68. 

ANANIAS  the  Highpriest,  Acts  II., 
431,  440-443- 

ANARCHY  in  the  church.  Pastoral 
Epistles,  y^,  271. 

ANATHEMA,  Meaning  of.  Exo- 
dus, 224;  I.  Corinthians,  398. 

of  Galatians,  34-49. 

ANCYRA,  Acts  II.,  339,  367. 

AND,  Many  books  of  the  Old  Tes 
tament  begin  with,  Exodus,  i. 

ANDREE,  M.  Tony,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  225,  22y,  229. 

ANDREW,  Mark,  86;  John  I.,  61. 

ANGEL  OF  JEHOVAH,  Exodus, 
363;  Numbers,  281. 

and  Gideon,  Judges,  145-148. 

and  Ja-cob,  Joshua,  133. 

and  Zecharias,  Luke,  26. 

announces  the  birth  of  Samson, 

Judges,  266-271. 

captain    of  the    Lord's    host, 

Joshua,  128-139. 

ANGELS,   Pastoral  Epistles,  138. 

and  Moses,  Exodus,  47. 

as  emanations,  Hebrews,  22. 

as  witnesses,  Ephesians,  173. 

assembly  of,  Hebrews,  301. 

in  the  book  of  Daniel,   Daniel, 

67,  68. 


ANGELS— APOSTACY 


71 


ANGLES  in  the  book  of  Zechariah, 
Twelve  Prophets  II.,  310-319. 

Jesus  Christ  and  the,  Hebrews, 

21-46. 

Man   inferior  to,  Hebrews,  34. 

mediators,      Colossians,     2T^y 

Ministry  of,  Hebrews,  27,  316. 

Sinful,  James,  408-412;  Peter, 

289. 

visit  Abraham,  Genesis,  172. 

visit  Lot,  Genesis,  176,  188. 

ANGER,        Proverbs,       204-207; 

Ephesians,  294-295. 
of  God,  Song  of  Solomon,  142; 

Isaiah  I.,  47-56. 
ANIMALS,    The  lower,  Isaiah   I., 

190-194. 
Our  mediatorship  to,  Isaiah  I., 

193. 

Treatment    of,    Deuteronomy, 

430-432. 
ANNANUS,  James,  40. 
ANNAS,  Acts  II.,  30. 
ANOINTING    OIL    for    the   sick, 

James,   Ti'^^^^- 
for  the    Tabernacle,    Exodus, 

423- 

used  for  priests,  Leviticus,  201. 

ANSELM  of  Canterbury,  Order  for 

visitation  of  the  sick,   Leviti- 
cus, 45,  46. 
ANSHAN,  Isaiah  II.,  163. 
ANT,  The,  Proverbs,  ?^t,,  S7,  ?,S,. 
ANTHROPOMORPHISM,  Genesis, 

60;  Numbers,  1 69; Isaiah,  144; 

Jeremiah  I.,  ^9,;^. 
ANTICHRIST,         Thessalonians, 

317;  John  Epistles,  167-172. 
ANTIGONOUS,  Rabbi,    Ecclesias- 

tes,  294. 


ANTINOMIAN  BELIEF,  Acts  I., 

134,  II.,  62;  Pastoral  Epistles, 

44,    49,    298,    299;    Hebrews, 

148,  201. 

Results  of.  Exodus,  315. 

ANTIOCH-Syrian,  Church  of.  Acts 

IL,  146,  154. 

City  of.  Acts  IL,  150-153- 

Paul  at,  Acts  II. ,  157. 

People  and  nicknames  of,  Acts 

II.,  159. 

Synagogue  of.  Acts  II. ,  155. 

Synod  at,  James,  360. 

ANTIOCH    of    Pisidia,    Acts    IL, 

198. 
Paul    at,    Acts    II. ,    206-210; 

Galatians,  129-162. 
ANTIOCHUS    EPIPHANES, 

Psalms    IL,    349,    353,    400; 

Daniel,  13,  55,  162,  245,  261, 

299-318;  Acts  IL,  6;  Hebrews, 

264. 
AORIST,  as  used  by  John,  John 

Epistles,  yy. 
APHRAATES,  James,  22. 
APOCRYPHA,  James,    145,    156, 

204,  424. 

Jude's  use  of,  James,  424. 

Value  of  the,  James,  76-79. 

APOCRYPHAL  ACTS,  Acts  IL,  2. 
APOCRYPHAL  GOSPELS,    Acts 

I.,  79. 
APPOLINARIAN  HERESY,  Acts 

L,  124. 
APPOLLONIUS       OF     TYANA, 

John  Epistles,  189. 
APOLLOS,  Acts  IL,  341-343,  347; 

I.   Corinthians    34;    Pastoral 

Epistles,  203,  208,  214. 
APOSTASY.  Hebrews,  95. 


72 


APOS  TLB— A  RMO  UR 


APOSTLE,  Meaning  of,  Acts  II., 
83,  84,  193;  Galatians,  12. 

Paul's  claim  to  be  an,   Colos- 

sians,  9. 

The  sign  of  an,  II.  Corinthians, 

224-236. 
The  title,   Acts  I.,   348;    Pas- 
toral Epistles,  69,  yo. 

APOSTLES'  CREED,  Acts  I.,  417. 

APOSTOLIC  CONSTITUTIONS, 
Acts  I.,  20i;  Acts  II.,  344; 
Pastoral  Epistles,  125,  156. 
232. 

APPEARANCES  deceitful,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 258;  II.  Samuel,  215. 

Idolatry  of,  I.  Samuel,  259. 

APPHIA,  Colossians,  423. 

APPULEIUS,  Pastoral  Epistles, 
379. 

AQUILA  AND  PRISCILLA,  Acts 
II.,  322,  2>^2>'  ^2^2,  2>?>2>^  2>i7, 
341,  347;  Pastoral  Epistles, 
413,  414- 

AQUILEIA,  Church  of.  Acts  II., 
247. 

AQUINAS.  Thomas,  John  Epis- 
tles, 41. 

ARABAH  wady.  Numbers,  244. 

ARABIA,  Isaiah  I.,  2yy. 

Paul  in.  Acts  II.,  72-yy\  Gala- 
tians. 78-82. 

ARAD,  King  of.  Numbers,  178, 
243- 

ARAM,  Isaiah  I.,  94,  103  sq. 

ARATUS,  Acts  II.,  11,  315;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  225. 

ARCHAEOLOGY,  The  study  of 
Chronicles,  112,  113. 

ARCHIPPUS,  Colossians,  407,- 
410.  425-427- 

ARCHITECTURE,  Massive  an- 
cient, Ezra,  92-94. 


AREOPAGUS,   Court  of  the,  Acts 

II.,  309-317- 
ARETAS,  Acts  II.,  30,  81. 
ARGUMENT  FROM  DESIGN  and 

evolution,  Genesis,  9. 
ARIAN  HERESY,  Acts  I.,  124. 
ARISTARCHUS,  Colossians,  ^73, 

3^7,  388- 
ARISTIDES,   Apology  of,  Acts  I., 

35, 


IX.,  400,  418,    419;    II. 
214,  318-320. 


378; 


[07. 


ARISTOTLE,      Galatians, 
Pastoral  Epistles,  240. 

Logic,  Acts  I.,  132,  298. 

on  friendship,  Proverbs, 

on  habit,  Hebrews,  85. 

on  locusts,  Ecclesiastes, 

ARK,  The,  The  animals  in,  Genesis, 
56. 

where  stranded.  Genesis,  71. 

ARK  IN  THE  BULRUSHES,  Exo- 
dus, 31. 

ARK  OF  THE  COVENANT,  Exo- 
dus, 2,77;  Numbers,  44;  Jere- 
miah  I.,  124. 

among  the  Philistines,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 73-84- 

at    the    house    of  Obed-edom, 

II.    Samuel.    89;   Psalms   III., 

349- 

borne  before  the  host,  Num- 
bers, 116;  Joshua.  98. 

brought  to  Jerusalem,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 84-96. 

of  the  Temple,  I.    Kings,    177- 

180. 

taken    by    the    Philistines,    I. 

Samuel,  61-72. 

ARMOUR,  The  Christian,  Ephe- 
sians,  410-424;  Colossians, 
3tS. 


A  R  MOLD— A  SS  YRIA 


ARNOLD,  ^^attl1c\\^  quoted.  Job, 
95;  Proverbs,  359;  Ecclcsias- 
tes,  300;  Acts  I.,  151,  17S; 
I.  Corinthians,  334;  K;  he 
sians,  84,  126,  281 ;  John  Kpis- 
tlcs,    122,    262. 

and  Balaam;   Numbers,  304. 

ARNOLD,  Thomas,  Daniel,  75; 
Acts  L,  306. 

ARRL-VN,  James.  1S2. 

ART   claimed  for  God,   Numbers, 

95- 
ARTAXERXES,    Ezra,    no,   119, 

122,  153,  157,  194,  259,  341- 
ARTEALAS,  bishop  of  Lystra,  Acts 

IL,  213. 
ARTEMIS,  see  Diana. 
ARTEMISIUS,  Month  of,  Acts  IL, 

362. 
ASA,    king    of  Judah,    I.     Kings, 

321-326;  Chronicles,  338-365- 
Jehosaphat  succeeds,  I.  Kings, 

ASAHEL,  brother  of  Joab,  II. 
Samuel,  29. 

Death  of,  IL  Samuel,  30. 

ASENATH,  wife  of  Joseph,  Genesis, 

ASAPHITE     PSALMS,     Psalms, 

116. 
ASCENSION,  The,  of  Christ,  Mat- 
thew,    446-450;    Mark,    442- 

445;  Acts  L,  43-60. 
ASCENSION   OF    ISAIAH,    The, 

Acts  I.,  119. 
ASCETICISM,   Pastoral   Epistles, 

44,  142,  143. 
absent    from    the    teaching  of 

Christ,  Matthew,  98. 
and  luxury,   Colossians,    249, 

250. 


ASCETICISM  not  to  be  neglected. 

Philippians,  z^^,. 
ASHDOD,  Isaiah  I..  19S. 

The  ark  at,  I.  Samiirl.  y^. 

ASHER,  the  tribe.  Inheritance-  of, 

Joshua,  2^22. 
Moses  blessing.   Deutcronnm\-, 

470. 
ASHTORETH,  Worship  of,  Leviti 

cus,  387;  Jeremiah  L,  155. 
ASIARCHS,  Acts  IL.  2>7S-17^- 
ASSEMBLIES,    Calling   of.   Num- 
bers, 96. 
ASSIZE  COURTS,  Acts  II. ,  7,^2. 
ASSUMPTION  OF  B.  V.   MARY, 

Acts  I.,  68. 
ASSUMPTION  OF  MOSES,    The, 

Acts  I.,  119;  James,  419-423. 
ASSURANCE,  Hebrews,  174. 
Paul's  doctrine  of  Ephesians, 

113-115- 
ASSUR-BANI-PAL,    Twelve    Pro- 
phets IL,  12.  85. 

Inscription,  II.  Kings.  492. 

See  Asur-Bani-Pal. 

ASSVRLA,    Isaiah    I.,    53,    92  95, 

97,  103,  122. 

and  Ahaz,  II.  Kings,  230. 

and  Azariah,   II.    Kings,    210, 

211. 
and     Egypt,    II.    Kings, 

276,  298. 
and  Hezekiah,  II.  Kings, 

298,  319-350. 

and  Jehu,  II.  Kings,  141. 

and  Joash,  II.  Kings,  183. 

and  Menahem,  II.  Kings,  224. 

and  the  siege  of  Samaria,   IL 

Kings,  240. 

and  Syria,  II.  Kings,   189. 

Kings    of,    Table,    II.    Kings, 

487-489. 


2S^, 


2()6- 


74 


A  SS  YJ^IA—A  US  TIN 


ASSYRIA,  Penitential   Psalms   of, 
Deuteronomy,  134. 

The     prophets     and,    Twelve 

Prophets  I.,  44-58. 

Religion       of,      Deuteronomy, 

132-135- 
ASTROLOGY  neglected,  Job,  317. 
ASTRONOMY  and  unbelief,  Psalm 

L,  72. 
ASUR-BANTPAL,      Ezra,       158; 
Daniel,  188. 

See  Assur-Bani-Pal. 

ATHALIAH  of  Judah,  II.  Kings, 
146-153;  Chronicles,  401,  402 
ATHANASIUS,  St.,  Acts  I.,  270, 
291,  416;  II.,  301;  James,  7, 
16,  369;  John  Epistles,  283, 
302. 
ATHEISM  of  force  and  fear,  Isaiah 

I.,  168-178. 
a  product   of  the   city,   Jere- 
miah I.,  189. 

unknown    to  Israel,   Proverbs 

II,  18. 
ATHENAGORAS,    Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 125. 

apology,  Acts  II.,  282. 

ATHENS,  Church  of.  Acts  II.,  321. 

Paul  at.  Acts  II.,  305-321. 

Topography  of.  Acts  II.,  312. 

ATHLETE,  Hebrews,  194. 
as  a  type  of  Christian,    Pas- 
toral Epistles,  348-349. 
ATONEMENT,       Exodus,      379; 
Ephesians,  318-320. 

An  aspect  of.   Proverbs,   362- 

374- 
the  center  of  Christianity,  Gala- 

tians,  25. 

Christ's,  Hebrews,  38. 

Extent  of  the,  John  Epistles, 

102-105. 


ATONEMENT       for       omissions. 
Numbers,  184. 

Great  day  of,   Leviticus,  256- 

26Tt,    463;    Numbers,    356;  I. 
Kings,  188;  Hebrews,  296. 

meaning    of.    Proverbs,    362- 

371;  Romans,  142. 

Missions  and  the,  John  Epis- 
tles, 1 06- 1 16. 

Sacrificial,   Ezekiel,  476-484. 

Theory     of     substitution,     I. 

Kings,  203. 

The  word,  Leviticus,  45. 

ATTALIA,  Acts  IL,  201,  276. 

AUGUSTINE,  St.,  John  I.,  331; 
Romans,  100 J  Galatians,  154; 
Ephesians,  240;  Pastoral 
Epistles,  229,  S7i\  Hebrews, 
142;  John  Epistles,  41,  62, 
148,  177.  i8i. 

and  the  law.  Exodus,  277. 

Christ    in    the    storm,    Mark, 

137. 

City    of    God,    Ezekiel,    497; 

Twelve  Prophets  II. ,  157. 

Confessions,  Song  of  Solomon, 

237;  Acts  II. ,  29,  286;  Ro- 
mans, 233,  T,7Tf;  Thessaloni- 
ans,  187;  John  Epistles,  112, 
144. 

Letters,    Acts     I.,     195,     242, 

386;  II.,  398,  401;  James,  4. 

on  the  resurrection,  Mark,  335. 

on  seeing  God,  Exodus,  ^7;^. 

use  of  heathen  learning.  Exo- 
dus, 195. 

AURELIUS  VICTOR,  Acts  IL, 
163. 

AURICULAR  CONFESSION, 
James,  2,2,^,  340. 

AUSTIN,   St.,  John  Epistles,  116. 


A  urn  Of:  IT  y—a  za  zel                        75 

AUTHORITY,    Divine    origin    of, 

AUTHORITY    rejected,      Genesis, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  2yy2y>,. 

8? 

of  Christ,  Ephcsians,  375 

AVARICE,    Dangers  of,   Pastora. 

of  our  High-priest,  Hcbrewij,  yj. 

Epistles,  196-198, 

The  question    of,    Colossians, 

AZARIAH,  I.  Kings,  141. 

174. 

AZARIAH,     king    of    Judah,    II. 

AUTHORS    possess    a    variety  in 

Kings,     209-214;    Chronicles, 

style,  Joshua,  16,  17. 

418-424. 

AUSTRALIAN,    The   native,    not 

AZAZEL,       Leviticus,       264-276; 

without     ideas    of    morality, 

Numbers,  355;  I.  Kings,  210; 

Deuteronomy,  89. 

James,  411. 

BAA  L-PEOR— BALAAM 


B 


BAAL-PEOR,  Judges,  51;  Psalms 

III.,  147- 

Festiv^al  of,  Numbers,  314. 

BAAL-WORSHIP    and    Elijah,    I. 

Kings,  383-398. 

extirpated,  II.  Kings,  1 31-145. 

3AAL-ZEBUT,  Ahaziah  worships, 

II.  Kings,  8-10. 
BAALS,      The,      Numbers,     295; 

Judges,  51.  52. 

names  from,  I.  Kings,  350. 

BAANAH  AND  RECHAB,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 58-60. 
BAASHA,  king  of  Israel,  I.  Kings, 

310. 
BABYLON,    Isaiah    I.,    93,    201, 

405-415;  II-j  55,  189-204. 
Call  to  leave,  Isaiah  II.,   211, 

396. 
Captivity  in,  Psalms  III.,  370- 

375;  Ecclesiastes,  32-43. 

Isaiah  I.,  201,  402. 

Capture  of,  Isaiah  II.,  146. 

compared    with   Rome,  Isaiah 

II.,  1S9-199. 

Cruelty  of,  Isaiah  II.,  201. 

Early    history    of,    Isaiah  II., 

192. 
Tlie    fall    of.   Revelation,   303- 

315- 
in    the    modern   world,   Isaiah 

II.,  200sq. 

its  pride,  Isaiah  II.,  191. 

Jeremiah   and,    Jeremiah    II., 

25S-263. 
Jews  return  from,  Ezra,  36-47. 


BABYLON,  Meaning  of  the  name, 
Isaiah  II.,  191. 

of  John,  Revelation,  274-276. 

Persian  period  in,  Ecclesiastes, 

43-66. 

Religion  of,  Isaiah  II.,  193. 

Ruin  of,  Isaiah  II.,  199-204. 

yields  to  Cyrus,  Isaiah  II.,  193. 

BABYLONIA,  Ancient  civilization 
of.  Genesis,  84. 

described,  Isaiah  II.,  53. 

History    of,    Isaiah    II,,    107, 

146. 

BACON,  Lord  Francis,  Proverbs, 
i6,  230. 

BAETHGEN,  Friedrich,  Psalms  I., 
151,  158,  166,  178,  219;  II., 
16,  59,  75,  105,  127,  228, 
261,  290,  295,  311,  353,  360, 
363,  ?i77,  427,  502;  III.,  17, 
30,  88,  91,  120,  181,  201,  233, 
294,  372,  398,  407,  421,460. 

BAGEHOT,  Walter,  Isaiah  L,  109; 

II.,  199. 
BAILEY,    Philip     James,     Fes^us 

quoted.  Job,  290. 
BALAAM    and    Balak,    Numbers, 

288. 

as  an  illustration,  Peter,  307. 

Characterof,  Joshua,  259,  269. 

critical.  Numbers,  283. 

End  of.  Numbers,  320. 

First  parable  of.  Numbers,  292. 

Fourth  parable  of,    Numbers, 

309. 
his  error,  Numbers,  273. 


BALA  A  M—BA  THSHEBA 


BALAAM,  his  knowledge  of 
Jehorab,  Numbers,  267;  re- 
fuses to  go  to  Moab,  Numbers, 
26S. 

like  Absalom,  Numbers,  2^22. 

Name  of.  Numbers,  262. 

Prayer  of,  Numbers,  296. 

Reputation  of,  Numbers,  261. 

Second    parable    of,   Numbers, 

300. 

Third    parable    of,    Numbers, 

305- 

used  by  Jude,  James,  442-449. 

BALAK    and   Balaam,    Numbers, 

bewildered,  Numbers,  305. 

his  sacrifices.  Numbers,  290. 

in  anxiety.  Numbers,  261. 

BALBILLUS,  John  Epistles,  19. 
BALJON,  II.  Corinthians,  134. 
BALM  OF  GILEAD,  Jeremiah  I., 

186-188. 
BAN,  Cherem  the  word  for,  Deuter- 
onomy,    1 69-1 71;    Galatians, 

44. 
Law    of  the,    Leviticus,    554- 

558;  Deuteronomy,  168-201. 
BAPTISM,  Pastoral  Epistles,  284- 

293;  Hebrews,  87,  186,  240. 
Buried  with  Christ  in,  Colos- 

sians,  205-208. 

Formula  of.  Acts  II.,  345. 

of    Christ,    Matthew,    31-38; 

Mark,  6-13. 

of  Cornelius,  Acts  IL,  140. 

of  the  Ethiopian  Eunuch,  Acts 

I.,  416. 

of  John,  Luke,  96. 

of  John,  whence  was  it?  Mark, 

310-317. 
of  Paul,  Acts  II. ,  T2yj. 


BAPTISM,    preached     by    Peter, 

Acts  L,  137-146. 
Red  Sea    passage    a    type    of, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  289. 
BARAK,  Judges,  98-sq. 
agreement        with       Deborah, 

Judges,  140. 

Faith  of,  Hebrews,  26. 

BARCLAY,  Robert,  Acts  IL,  122. 
BARCOCHBA,  Acts  I.,  157. 
BARNABAS,   Acts  IL,    7,    8,    81, 

155)   258;  Galatians,   91    and 

Paul;    Acts    I.,    218-221;    IL, 

248-251. 

Early  life  of,  Acts  I.,  216,  218. 

Epistle  of,  James,  18,  2^^,   76. 

BARONIUS,  Caesar,  Aimals,  Acts 

IL,  259. 
BARTIMAEUS  healed,  Mark,  295- 

298. 
BARTOLOCCI,       William,      Bibl. 

Rabbiu,  Acts  IL,  13. 
BARUCH,  The  recorder,  IL  Kings, 

426. 
BARUCK,  son  of  Neriah,  Jeremiah 

I.,  36;  IL,  2>2>,  37,  54-62. 
BARZILLAI,     the    Gileadite,    IL 

Samuel,  249. 
David    and,    II.   Samuel,   301- 

313- 
BASHAN  reduced.  Numbers,  255. 
BASILIDES,  Pastoral  Epistles,  8, 

42. 
BASNAGE,  Jacob,   History  of  the 

Jews,  Acts  IL,  13,  19. 
BATHSHEBA    and    Adonijah,    I. 

Kings,  107. 

and  David,  II.  Samuel,  162  sq. 

and  the  succession  of  Solomon. 

I.  Kings,  85. 
became  the  wife  of  David,   II. 

Samuel.   170. 


78 


BA  THSHEBA—BEROEA 


BATHSHEBA,name  not  in  Chron- 
icles, Chronicles,  147. 

BAUDISSIN,  VV.  W.  F.,  Isaiah  II., 
463;  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  483. 

BAUR,  F.  C,  Acts  II.,  i ;  II.  Cor- 
inthians, 117;  Galatians,  125; 
Ephesians,  4;  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 8,  10,  12,  2i2i\  James, 
138,  140. 

BAXTER,  R.,  Acts  I.,  134,  137. 

BAYET,  C,  De  Titulis  Attica 
Christ,  Acts  II.,  308,  321. 

BEATITUDES,  The,  Matthew,  58- 
69. 

See  Sermon  on  the  Mount. 

BEAUTY,  moral  and  aesthetic, 
Deuteronomy,  104. 

BECK,  J.  T.,  Ephesians,  103,  107. 

BEDE,  Venerable,  Eccles.  Hist., 
Acts  I.,  294;  James,  6,  8,  84, 
103,  153,  172,  267,  268,  282, 
285,  331,  351. 

BEELZEUB,  Jesus  Christ  and, 
Mark,  91-95. 

BEET,  J.  A.,  II.  Corinthians,  95, 
137,151;  233;  Galatians,  143, 
309,    328;    Ephesians,    4,  66, 

99,  345- 

BEETHOVEN,  Ludwig  Von, 
Funeral  march  of,  Exodus,  387. 

BELLARMINE,  Robert  F.  R., 
James,  338. 

BELLS  on  highpriests  robe,  Levit- 
icus, 196. 

BELSHAZZAR,  Isaiah  II.,  113, 
Daniel,  54,  203-217. 

BENAIAH,  II.  Samuel,  345;  I. 
Kings,  87. 

slays  Adonijah,  I.  Kings,  109. 

slays  Joab,  I.  Kings,  113. 

slays  Shimei,  I.  Kings,  114. 


BENE-KEDEM,  Job,  23. 
BENEDICTION,    The    ApostoUc, 

Hebrews,  329. 
The  double,  of  the  Tabernacle, 

Leviticus,  231. 
BENEDICTUS,  The,  Luke,  28,  42- 

44. 
BENEDICTUS,  The  lesser,   Luke, 

36-39- 

BENGEL,  J.  A.,  II.  Corinthians, 
121,  155,  179,  235,  310,311, 
318,  350;  Galatians,  148; 
Ephesians,  322;  Thessaloni- 
ans,  1 17;  Hebrews,  100;  James, 
115,  285,  325,  418;  JohnEpis- 
tles,  21,  105,  119,  181,  219. 

BENHADAD  and  Ahab,  I.  Kings, 
451-472. 

and  the  siege  of  Samaria,   II. 

Kings,  76-86. 

BENHADAD  III.,  II.  Kings,  183. 

BENJAMIN,  Jacob  and,  Genesis, 

405. 

Joseph  and,  Genesis,   t^^^?,. 

BENJAMIN,  the  tribe.  Inheritance 
of,  Joshua,  316-319. 

Moses   blesses,    Deuteronomy, 

467. 

BENT,  J.  T.,  Acts  II.,  374. 

BENTLEY,  Sir  Richard,  John  Epis- 
tles, 137,  240. 

BENZINGER,  J.,  Ezekiel,  407. 

BERNARD  OF  CLAIRVAUX, 
Song  of  Solomon,  43;  Acts  II., 
417;  Romans,  75;  Peter,  66; 
John  Epistles,  71,  115,  154, 
203. 

BERNARDINE  A  PICONIO,  Ephe- 
sians, 194. 

BERNICE,  Acts  II.,  432,  448. 

BEROEA,  Acts  II.,  296,  302. 


BETHEL— BLOOD 


79 


BETHEL,  Jacob  at,  Genesis.  2S2. 
BETHHORON,    Battles     at, 

Joshua,  319. 

Battles  of,  Joshua,  22y22,'S. 

BETHLEHEM,  Judges,  364,  3S6; 

L  Samuel,  254,  272, 

Christ  born  in,  Luke,  62. 

lacking  in  hospitality,  Genesis, 

175- 

BETHSHEAN,  Joshua,  303. 

BETHSHEMESH,  Ark  at,  L  Sam- 
uel, 81-82. 

Curiosity    of  the    men    of,    L 

Samuel,  '&2. 

BEVERIDGE,  William,  Acts  L,  1 34. 

BEVSCHLAG,  Willibald,  James, 
60. 

BEZA,  Ephesians,  15,  275;  James, 
159,  222,  2i^T,  418,  432,454, 

457- 
BEZALEEL,  Exodus,  426  sq. 
BL\S,  the  sage,  James,  173. 
BIBLE,    The,    Accuracy    of    the, 

Jeremiah  L,  177. 
the  bread  of  life,  Deuteronom}', 

213,  214. 

its  character.  Proverbs,  382. 

not  a  fetish,  L  Kings,  4. 

nothing  in  it  without  purpose, 

Joshua,  376. 

Statements  of.  Numbers,  281. 

Study  of,  Joshua,  64-66. 

Universality  of  the,  Job,  17. 

the  word  of  God,  Numbers,  163, 

BIBLE  HISTORY,  the  history  of 

Redemption,  Genesis,  28. 
BIGOTRY  of  Zophar,  Job,  244. 
BILDAD,  Bitterness  of.  Job,  216. 

Character  of.  Job,  102. 

his  first  speech,  Job,  135. 

second  speech,  Job,  215. 


BINGHAM,    Richard,    Antiquities, 

Acts  I.,  67,  3S6;  IL,  176,  396; 

John  Epistles,   170. 
BISHOPS,    Origin    of,     Acts    IL, 

416  418. 
BITHIAH,  Chronicles,  76. 
BITTERNESS  of  soul,   Proverbs, 

194- 
BLAMELESS,   Christians    to    be, 

Philippians,  143. 
BLANDINA,     Pastoral     Epistles, 

257- 
BLASPHEMY,   Penalty  of,  Levit- 
icus, 480-486. 
BLESSED  in  the  Psalms,  Psalms 

L,  2;  IL,  436,  445,  447. 
They    who    bless    are,    Peter, 

119-132. 
BLESSING  OF    MOSES,    Deuter- 
onomy, 460-470. 
BLESSINGS   OF   GOD,  Hebrews, 

89. 

Catalogue  of.  Psalms  III.,  430. 

dwelling  with  Him,  Psalms  IL, 

250. 
The  meaning  of  the.  Genesis, 

238. 

of  Aaron,  Numbers,  67. 

of  Moses,  Numbers,  116. 

Spiritual         and       temporal, 

Joshua,  126. 
willingly    bestowed,      Genesis, 

248. 
BLOMFIELD,   Bishop,    Acts    IL, 

229. 
BLOOD  of  the  Passover,  Exodus, 

189,  190. 
The   plague  of.   Exodus,    129- 

132. 

Prohibition  of,  Leviticus,  99. 

Revenge,  Numbers,  400. 

Sprinkling  of,  Leviticus,  136. 


so   BLOOD  OF  JESUS  CHRIST— BRITISH  ASSOCIATION 


BLOOD  OF  JESUS  CHRIST  cries 
for  pardon.  Genesis,  39. 

See  Atonement. 

BOASTING,  Foolish,  II.  Corin- 
thians, 325-341- 

BOAZ,  Judges,  3S9-416. 

BOCKIM,  Judges,  35  44- 

BODENSTEIN,  Andrew  Rudolph, 
James,  24. 

BODY  and  the  Christian  life,  Phil- 
ippians,  310-314. 

and  spirit,  Exodus,  105. 

compare  with  society,  I.  Corin- 
thians, 283. 

for  the  Lord,   I.   Corinthians, 

152-155- 
influences  the    higher    nature, 

Exodus,  320. 
The  spiritual,   in  the  resurrec- 
tion,  I    Corinthians,  371-386. 
to  be  kept   under,   I.   Samuel, 

55;  I.  Corinthians,  223. 
BOECKH,   Augustus,    Corpus  In- 

scriptionum    Graecarum,    Acts 

II.,  205,  278,  300,  363,  366. 
BOEFIME,    Jacob,   on  the  Divine 

shining,  Numbers,  69. 
BOETHIUS  quoted.  Job,  288. 
BOILS,    The   plague   of,   Exodus, 

144-146. 
BOLLANDISTS,Acts  I.,  in,  162; 

Pastoral  Epistles,  248. 
BONDAGE,   Return    to    spiritual, 

Galatians,  256-271. 
"BOOK   OF   THE  DEAD,"  Job, 

2  13- 

BOOK  OF  ENOCH,  Acts  I.,   25, 
28,    119;    James,    409,     432 

447- 
BOOK   OF   JUBILEES,    Acts    I., 

25,  2^. 


BOOK  OF  THE  LAW  found    by 
Hilkiah,   II.    Kings,   386,  399- 
401. 
BOOTH,  Wm.,  John  Epistles,  231. 
"BORROWED     JEWELS,"    Exo- 
dus, 69,  167. 
BOSSUET,  Jacob   B.,   John  Epis- 
tles, 136. 
BOUNDARIES    OF    LAND,   Num- 
bers, 390. 
BRADFORD,  John,  Romans,  54. 
BRAVERY,  Disinterested,  Exodus, 

40. 
BRAZEN    SERPENT,    The,   Num- 
bers, 248. 

and  Jesus  Christ,  John  I.,  117- 

128. 

Symbolism  of.  Numbers,  249. 

BREAD  and  faith,  Deuteronomy, 
207. 

of  life,  John  I.,  207-222. 

of  the  soul,  Deuteronomy,  202 

217. 
BREDENKAMP,        Conrad        J., 
Isaiah  I.,  237;   II. ,    130,    17S, 
205,  211,  226,  435,457^458; 
Twelve  Prophets  II.,  134. 
BRETHREN,  Colossians,  15,  385. 

Love    of    the,    Thessalonians, 

1 51-158;  Peter,  249. 
BRETSCHNEIDER,  Karl  T.,  Pas 
toral  Epistles,  125;  John  Epis- 
tles, 125,  307. 
BRIBERY,  Isaiah  I.,  47. 
BRICK  MAKING  in  Egypt,  Exo- 
dus, 92-94. 
BRIGGS,    C.    A.,    Isaiah    II.,    18, 

336,  345.  412,  435- 
BRIGHT,   John,  Twelve  Prophets 

I..  241. 
BRITISH  ASSOCIATION,  James, 
346. 


BROOKS—B  UTLER 


81 


BROOKS,  Phillips,  Luke,  315. 

BROTH  TR  OV  THE  LORD, 
James,  28,  31,  374. 

BROTHKRHOOD,  Genesis,  40, 
41 ;  Numbers,  408. 

Christian,  Peter,  55-68. 

Christ's,  Hebrews,  39,  41. 

in    the    church,    Joshua,    "jy, 

Colossians,  476,  477. 

of   man,    Twelve  Prophets  L, 

406;  Galatians,  234. 

of  nations,  Joshua,  yd. 

BROWN,  David,  The  Book  of  Rev- 
elation, Revelation,  205. 

Epistle  to  the  Romans,  Ro- 
mans, 207. 

The  Second  advent.  Revela- 
tion, 130. 

BROWNING,  Robert,  quoted. 
Numbers,  275,  294;  Deuter- 
onomy, 115;  Judges,  379;  n. 
Kings,  319;  Chronicles,  443; 
Proverbs,  351;  Ecclesiastes, 
16;  Song  of  Solomon,  172, 
181;  Isaiah  I.,  62,,  220,  354; 
Ezekiel,  120,  231;  John  I.,  27; 
Romans,  88;  I.  Corinthians, 
119,  278;  Ephesians,  234. 

BROWNLOW  AND  NORTHCOTE, 
Roma  Sotteranea,  Acts  I., 
112. 

BRUCE,  A.  B.,  John  L,  233; 
Thessalonians,  176;  Hebrews, 
44>  45;  James,  410. 

BRUCKNER,  Benno  B.,  James, 
60,  378,  390,  418. 

BRUGSCH,  Heinrich,  Jeremiah 
IL,  221 ;  Ezekiel,  281, 

BRYCE,  James,  Locusts  in  South 
Africa,  Twelve  Prophets  II., 
400, 


BUCK  LAND,    F.,    John    Epistles, 

131,  132- 

BUC^KLE,  Thomas,  Ecclesiastes, 
144. 

BUDDE,  Karl,  Twelve  Prophets 
II.,  119,  121,  124,  125,  128, 
134,  498,  505. 

BUDDHA,  Doctrine  of  Karma, 
Proverbs,  71. 

Early    life   of,    John    Epistles, 

155-157- 

BUDDHISM,  Acts  L,  400;  John 
Epistles,  no. 

BULL,  George,  Acts  I.,  134. 

BUNTING,  Jabez,  Acts  I.,  3. 

BUNYAN,  John,  quoted.  Job, 
144;  Song  of  Solomon, 
2:^-j\  Ephesians,  75;  Colos- 
sians, 269;  Thessalonians,  jy. 
144. 

BURDEN-BEARING  Judges, 
290;  Galatians,  390-404. 

BURGER,  Johann  G.,  Revelation, 
330. 

BURNET,  Bishop  Gilbert,  Com- 
mentary on  the  thirty-nine  arti- 
cles, Acts  I,,  192. 

BURNS,  Robert,  Proverbs,  293; 
Isaiah  I.,  192;  Thessalonians, 
143,  144. 

BURNT  OFFERING,  Leviticus, 
29  62. 

BUSHNELL,  Horace,  quoted, 
Job,  259;  John  I.,  359. 

BUSINESS,  Twelve  Prophets  I., 
430. 

The  highest  good  in,   Ecclesi 

astes,  142  186. 

BUTLER,  Alfred  J.,  Coptic 
Churches,  Acts  II.,  256. 


82 


B  UTLER—BZO  VI  US 


BUTLER,     Archer,    James,    383, 

BUTLER,        Samuel,        Hiidibras 

3?>6. 

quoted,  Proverbs,  266. 

BUTLER,     Joseph,     James,    99, 

BUXTORF,  Johann,  Lexicon,  Acts 

443. 

IL,  16. 

The  analogy,  Acts  I.,  18;  IL, 

BYRON,  Lord,  Jeremiah  IL,  217; 

^33y  413;  John  Epistles,  71, 

John  Epistles,  158. 

249. 

BZOVIUS,     Abraham,      Continua- 

 Durham      charge,      Pastoral 

tion  of  Baronius'  annals,  Acts 

Epistles,  368. 

I.,  415. 

CA  ESA  R—  CA  MP 


83 


66, 


Acts 


CAESAR,  Augustus,  Acts  II.,  2^2^. 

Claudius,  Acts  II.,  ^t^T^. 

Julius,    Acts    II.,    31;    James, 

287. 

Tiberius,    Acts    II.,    2^6, 

185. 

CAESAREA-ON-THE-SEA, 
II.,  loi,  147. 

Paul  at,  Acts  II.,  4. 

CAIN,  Genesis,  28-41. 

Faith  of,  Hebrews,  223. 

Punishment  of,  Genesis,  43, 

Rejection  of  his  offering,  Gene- 
sis,   T,2. 

CAIPHAS,  Acts  II.,  30. 

and  Christ's  popularity,  John 

I-,  371,  il^- 

and  the  trial  of  Christ,  Mat- 
thew, 409;  Mark,  407-413; 
John  II.,  299. 

CAJETAN,  Cardinal,  James,  332, 

CALEB,  Descendants  of,  Chroni- 
cles, 50. 

honoured,  Numbers,  173. 

Inheritance  of,    Joshua,    262- 

274,  291-294. 

one  of  the  spies,  Numbers,  151. 

CALIGULA,  the  Emperor,  and  the 
Alexandrian  Jews,  Ecclesias- 
tes,  240;  Acts  II.,  82,  94,  166, 
167;  James,  349. 

CALL  OF  GOD,  Belief  in  the. 
Genesis,  91. 

Christ  and  the  first  disciples, 

Matthew,  52-56;  Mark,  17-23, 
Luke,  162-176. 


CALL  OF  GOD,  Difficulties  which 
interpose.  Numbers,  no. 

for  Moses,  Exodus,  65-69. 

of  Elisha,  I.  Kings,  445-450. 

ripens  life  into  power,  Judges, 

148. 

Surrender    and,    Jeremiah    I., 

270. 

to  Ezekiel,  Ezekiel,  42-55. 

to  Isaiah,  Isaiah  I.,  57-90. 

to  Jeremiah,  Jeremiah  I.,  58- 

to    Levi,  Mark,  56-61;  Luke, 

162-176. 

to    the    merchant,   Isaiah   I., 

296. 

to  the  ministry,  Isaiah  I.,  76- 

"j^t'^  I.  Corinthians,  104,  105. 

to  service,  Joshua,  50. 

CALVIN,  John,  Psalms  II.,  55,  59, 
167,  283,  350,  405;  Isaiah  I., 
79;  IL,  15,  215,  217,  218, 
397;  Twelve  Prophets  II. ,  153, 
159,  172;  John  I.,  342,  349; 
Acts  I.,  384;  IL,  128,  2>^y, 
Romans,  151,  226;  I.  Corinthi- 
ans, 268;  II.  Corinthians,  93, 
129,  167,  189,  216,  239,  251, 
260,  T^-j^ii  376',  Galatians,  142, 
273;Ephesians,  98,  322;  Thes- 
salonians,  177;  Hebrews,  100, 
250;  James,  222,  283,  319, 
325,  360,  417,  432;  Peter 
XVIL 

CAMP,  Arrangement  of  the,  Num- 
bers, 27. 


84 


CANA—CA  TO 


CANA,  The  marriage  in,  John  I., 

CAPTIVITY,    The,    in    Babylon, 

69. 

Psalms  III.,  370-375;  Ecclesi- 

CANAAN, Degeneracy  of  its  peo- 

astes, 32-43;  Isaiah  I.,  128. 

ple.  Judges,  8. 

The    Jews  return  from,   Ezra, 

Gods  of,  Judges,  52. 

36-47;  Song  of  Solomon,  230- 

promised  to  Israel,  Joshua,  5. 

241. 

reported  on,  Numbers,  157. 

Persian  period  of,  Ecclesiastes, 

Rest  of,  Hebrews,  61. 

43-66;  Isaiah  I.,  148. 

suited  for  its  purpose,  Judges, 

Results  of,  Matthew,  6,  7. 

7. 

See  EXILE. 

- — to  be  explored,  Numbers,  152. 

CARDINALS,  College  of,  Acts  L, 

CANAANITES    admitted    to    fel- 

280. 

lowship.  Numbers,  183. 

CARLYLE,  Thomas,  quoted,  Job, 

Bad  influence  of  the,  Joshua, 

6?>,  22y,  Psalms  I.,  190;  III., 

357. 

295 ;  Proverbs,   305 ;   Song  of 

Extermination  of  the,  Deuter- 

Solomon, 207;  Isaiah  I.,  413; 

onomy,  175-183. 

Twelve  Prophets  II. ,  5 1 ;  John 

Low  moral  tone  of,  Leviticus, 

II. ,     194;     Ephesians,     lyy, 

381. 

James,  166. 

Religion  of  the,  Deuteronomy, 

and  the  Hebrew  laws.  Exodus, 

129;  Joshua,  382. 

276. 

Remnant  of,  Joshua,  246. 

Sadness  of,  Ecclesiastes,  130. 

to    be   driven   out.    Numbers, 

CARMEL,    Mount,    Elijah    on,    I. 

389. 

Kings,  393-398. 

CANDACE,  Acts  L,  411,  412. 

CARMEL    of  Judah,    I.    Samuel, 

CANDELABRUM,  Numbers,  7S. 

382. 

Symbolism  of.  Numbers,  79. 

CARPOCRATES,  James,  389. 

CAPER-BERRY,          Ecclesiastes, 

CARPUS,    Pastoral   Epistles,   11, 

267,  268. 

411. 

CAPERNAUM,    Christ   at,    Luke, 

CASSIAN,  John,  James,  7. 

196. 

CASSIODORUS,    James,    2,    285, 

Last  words  of  Christ  at,  Mat- 

369. 

thew,  249-266. 

CASTE,      Leviticus,     151;    Gala- 

Synagogues  at,  Luke,  203. 

tians,  238 

CAPES,    W.   W.,    The  age  of  the 

CATHARI,       Pastoral      Epistles, 

Antonines,  Acts  I.,  154. 

127. 

The  early  empire,  Acts  IL,  109. 

CATHOLIC  CHURCH,  The,  The 

CAPITAL-PUNISHMENT,  Leviti- 

idea of  unity  in,  ProverbS;  246. 

cus,  421. 

CATHOLIC        EPISTLES,        In- 

 in      Christendom,     Leviticus, 

troduction,  James,  1-12. 

424. 

CATC,  Acts  I.,  58. 

CATULLUS— CHARLES  II. 


85 


CATULLUS,  Thessalonians,  170. 

CAVE,  William,  Historia  Liter- 
aria,  James,  6. 

Lives  of  the  Apostles,  Acts  IL, 

256,  259,  263. 

Lives  of  the  Fathers,   Acts   L, 

219. 

CKLEBRATIONS,  Evening,  Acts 
n.,  39S-401. 

CELLINI,  Benvenuto,  Pastoral 
Epistles,  50. 

CELSUS,  Pastoral  Epistles,  229, 
253;  James,  328;  John  Epis- 
tles, 244. 

CELTIC  LANGUAGE,  Acts  IL, 
264. 

CENCHREAE,  Acts  IL,  2>2>2. 

CENSERS,  The  two  hundred  and 
fifty.  Numbers,  198,  205. 

CENSURE,  Love  of,  of  others, 
James,  250-260. 

CENSUS  OF  ISRAEL,  Exodus, 
420-422;  Numbers,  18. 

David's,     IL,     Samuel,      T^jd- 

387. 

the  second,  Numbers,  2^22^. 

of  all  men,  Numbers,  20. 

Results  of  the,  Numbers,  22. 

CENTURION,  The,  Faith  of,  Luke, 

195-208. 
CEREMONIAL  DUTIES,  The  use 

of.  Numbers,  47. 
CERIANI,  Antonio  Maria,  James, 

422. 
CERINTHUS,  John  Epistles,  49. 
CERTAINTY,   Nature    of    histor- 
ical, Pastoral  Epistles,  105, 
CESNOLA,  General  Alexander  P., 

Acts  II. ,  205. 
CHALDEAN         SOOTHSAYING, 

Numbers,  263. 


CHANGE  and  vicissitude  help  us  to 

fear  God,  Deuteronomy,  155. 
CHANNING,  W.  E.,  James,  381. 
CHAOS  no  moral.  Job,  273. 
CHARACTER  and  glorying,  Phil- 

ippians,  288. 

and  ritual,  Galatians,  435,  447. 

and  the  understanding  of  truth, 

Hebrews,  90. 
attracts     character.     Judges, 

392. 
benefited    by    delay.    Genesis, 

capacity  to  distinguish,  Isaiah 

I.,  257-261. 

Decision  of.  Judges,  2i7^- 

Effect    of   change    on,   Deuter- 
onomy, 155. 
Fountain  of  Christian,  Colos- 

sians,  39-53- 

Love  and,  Philippians,  31,  35. 

National,  Judges,  205. 

of    Jacob    analyzed,    Genesis, 

260. 

of  Lot,  Genesis,  188. 

Salvation  aims  at  perfection  of. 

Genesis,  221. 
a   secret    in    the    groHlh    of. 

Genesis,  288. 

tested  by  power,  Genesis,  125. 

CHARITY       and      independence, 

Thessalonians,  1 51-168. 
characteristic  of  Christianity, 

Thessalonians,  158-160. 

for  the  suffering.  Job,  129. 

The  giving  of.  Judges,  400. 

in      judgment.      Genesis,    79; 

Joshua,  2>Tt2>. 

See  giving. 

CHARLEMAGNE,  Acts  IL,  11. 
CHARLES    II.    of   England,    and 

Cromwell,  Isaiah  I.,  162,  163. 


CHA  RRA  N—  CHIT  TIM 


CHARRAN,       Abraham      leaves, 

Genesis,  85  sq. 
CHARTERIS,    Dr.    Archibald  H., 

Acts  I.,  II. 
CHASTITY,    Law    of,    Leviticus, 

379-390;    Deuteronomy,    396- 

401. 
CHAUCER,  Geoffry,  Peter,  209. 
CHEDORLAOMER,       Expedition 

of,  Genesis,  121  sq. 
CHEREM,     The    word    for    ban, 

Deuteronomy,  1 69-1 71. 
CHERITH,  The  brook,  L  Kings, 

CHERUBIM,  The,  in  the  Taber- 
nacle, Exodus,  380. 

in  the  Temple,  I.   Kings,    180- 

185. 

CHEYNE,  T.  K.,  Psalm  I.,  21,  22,, 
i2,,  51,  59,  64,  103,  114,  151, 
161,  166,  178,  195,  202,  265, 
277,  2^6,  296,  303,  343;  II., 
15,  31,  49,  59,  65,69,  75,  y6, 
101,  105,  no,  121,  126,  127, 
132,  143,  160,  167,  175,  185, 
190,  195,  212,  214,  224,  227, 
228,  230,  22,Z,  240,  248,  256, 
257,  261,  272,  280,  288,  291, 
316,  345,  350,  360,  363,  2>77, 
405,  415,  419,  426,  427,441, 
447,  480,  486,  499,  502;  III., 
4,  17,  24,  30,  32,  59,  63,  65, 
88,90,92,  120,  134,  145,  147, 
164,  175,  188,  189,  190,  223, 
226,  233,  248,  319,  349,  Z72, 
391,  398,  407,  414,  431 ;  Prov- 
erbs, i;  Isaiah  I.,  3,  13,  196, 
198,  199,  211,  223,  375,440; 
II.,  19,  121,  211,  299,  2>Z2>, 
343,  383,  412,  414,  435,457, 
459,  464;  Jeremiah  II.,  4,  30, 


2i2>,  72,  75,  176,  182,  204,  289, 
314,  338;  Twelve  Prophets  I., 
264,  311,  360,  365;  II.,  60, 
65,  176,  209,  215,  312,  319, 
354,  359,  380,  444,  446,  498, 
504,  525- 

CHILDBEARING,  Purification 
after,  Leviticus,  320-344. 

■ Uncleanness  of,  Leviticus,  327- 

344- 

CHILDREN,  and  parents,  Colos- 
sians,  340-345. 

and  religion.  Exodus,  25. 

Care  of,  Pastoral  Epistles,  256. 

commanded  to  honour  par- 
ents, Exodus,  312-314. 

Early  influence  for,  Proverbs, 

53-56. 

growing  up  bad,  Jeremiah  II., 

351- 
have  a  sense  of  incompleteness. 

Genesis,  22. 
Jesus  Christ  and  the,  Matthew, 

252-258,270-273;  Mark,  254, 

268,  273. 
Mosaic  view  of  the  education 

of,  Deuteronomy,  146-167. 
of  Godly  parents  bad,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 44. 
represent  fresh  hopes,  Genesis, 

29. 

sacrificed,  II.  Kings,  354. 

Scant  religious  instruction  of, 

Exodus,*  191. 
Suffering  of.  Song  of  Solomon, 

149. 
Training  of,   II.  Samuel,  204; 

Proverbs,  56-64,  303-313- 
unable  to   understand  the  full 

truth,  Genesis,  7. 
CHITTIM,  Numbers,  306,  312. 


CHOICE— CHRISTIANS 


87 


CHOICE  and  appearance,  I.  Sam- 

CHRISTIAN WORK  and  money, 

uel,  258. 

Chronicles,  414. 

between  living  and  dying,  Phil- 

Continuity  of,  Chronicles,  194, 

ippians,  65-76. 

195- 

made  by  God  the  best,  Gene- 

 Shrinking  from,  I.  Samuel,  166. 

sis,  244. 

Variety  of,  Leviticus,  57,   ^^67,. 

No     escape     from      personal, 

CHRISTIANITY,    Alliances    with, 

Judges,  379. 

Numbers,  114. 

of    the     good,     Genesis,    22; 

Freedom  under,  Numbers,  209. 

Psalms     II.,    448;    Proverbs, 

practiced.  Acts  I.,  31. 

258-261. 

secularised.  Judges,  330. 

of  Lot,  Genesis,  iii  sq. 

Sympathy      with,      Numbers, 

of  Moses,  Exodus,  34-38. 

112. 

of  occupation  reveals  disposi- 

 ^\^^at  is?  John  II.,  406. 

tion.  Genesis,  22. 

CHRISTIANS    always    need  help, 

of  Solomon,  I.  Kings,  124. 

Joshua,  62. 

A  right,  Joshua,  156. 

armor,  Ephesians,  410-424. 

Temptation  to  a  wrong,  Gene- 

 as  pilgrims  in  the  world,  Peter, 

sis,  113. 

355-364- 

CHOSROES,  king.  Acts  II.,  159. 

death  with  Christ,  Colossians, 

CHRISTIAN,   as  an  athlete.  Pas- 

243-251- 

toral  Epistles,  348,  349. 

The  garments  of  the  renewed 

as    a   husbandman.    Pastoral 

soul,  Colossians,  305-319. 

Epistles,  350-352. 

growth,  Colossians,  238-241. 

as  a  soldier,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

Ideal  and  the  steps  thereunto. 

344-347- 

Peter,  41-54. 

The    incomplete,     Philippians, 

in    public    life,    Deuteronomy, 

97- 

201. 

law.  Rejection  of.  Numbers,  187. 

In  what  sense  are  we?  I.  Corin- 

 life  criticised,  Numbers,  158. 

thians,  60. 

Limitations  of  the.   Numbers, 

the  light  of  the  world,  Matthew, 

393- 

66-69. 

nation,  Duty  of.  Numbers,  160. 

Kings  to  God,  I.  Samuel,  263. 

Right    conception    of  the  life. 

living  epistles,  II.  Corinthians, 

Philippians,  95. 

99-1 11;  Colossians,  493. 

The   title,    Acts    II.,    159-162, 

The  new  nature  and  the  new 

211. 

life,  Colossians,  290-304. 

CHRISTIAN  COUNTRY,  A,  Jere- 

 not  free  from  the  law,  Exodus, 

miah  I.,  194-196. 

280. 

CHRISTIAN  LIBRARY,  The,  Arts 

not     exempt    from    calamity. 

II.,  394. 

Genesis,  97. 

88                   CHRISTIANS— II. 

CHRONICLES  XL 

CHRISTIANS,    Precepts    for    the 

I.  CHRONICLES     VII., 

22-27, 

innermost  life,  Colossians,  354- 

Deuteronomy,  2^^. 

370. 

26,  Joshua,  22. 

present  life  a  risen  life,   Colos- 

 29,  Joshua,  304. 

sians,  257-270. 

I.  CHRONICLES  IX.,  19, 

Psalms 

the  salt  of  the  earth,  Matthew, 

11.,  42. 

63-66. 

2,2,,  Psalms  III.,  359. 

slaying   self,   Colossians,    271- 

I.  CHRONICLES  XII.,  6, 

Psalms 

289. 

H.,  42. 

what  kind    ought  we    to    be? 

I.  CHRONICLES  XV.,  2, 

II.  Sam- 

Peter,  355-364- 

uel,  91. 

CHRISTOPHER,  The  legend    of, 

13,  II.  Samuel,  88. 

Hebrews,  317. 

I.    CHRONICLES   XVI., 

34,    41, 

CHRONICLES,  The  Book  of.  Age 

Joshua,  105. 

of,  Chronicles,  92-110. 

I.  CHRONICLES  XVIL,  1 

3,  Thes- 

and  Ezra  and  Nehemiah,  Ezra, 

salonians,  288. 

2-4. 

I.  CHRONICLES  XX.,  i,  Jeremiah 

Date  and  authorship.  Chroni- 

IL, 32. 

cles,  y6. 

I  CHRONICLES  XXL,  i, 

Song  of 

Historical  setting,  Chronicles, 

Solomon,  220. 

6-12. 

25,  Jeremiah  IL,  312 

Importance  of.  Chronicles,  22- 

I.    CHRONICLES   XXIII 

,  5,  n. 

28. 

Samuel,  217. 

Omissions  of,  Chronicles,  146. 

24,  27,  Numbers,  41. 

sources  and  mode  of  composi- 

I. CHRONICLES  XXV.,  i 

-3,  Dan- 

tion.  Chronicles,  13-21. 

iel,  30. 

I.  CHRONICLES  II.,  55,  Jeremiah 

I.    CHRONICLES  XXVIIL,   i,    I. 

n.,  45. 

Kings,  143. 

I.  CHRONICLES  III.,  5,  Proverbs, 

4,  Revelation,  78. 

52- 

I.  CHRONICLES  XXIX., 

5,  Levit- 

15,  Jeremiah  I.,  27. 

icus,  208. 

II,  Jeremiah  II.,  92. 

IL  CHRONICLES  I.,  9, 

Thessa- 

I.     CHRONICLES    IV.,    13,    15, 

lonians,  288. 

Joshua,  263. 

IL  CHRONICLES  VII.,  ] 

-3,   Eze- 

18,  Joshua,  22. 

kiel,  2i7- 

43,  Psalms  II.,  435. 

14,  James,  129. 

I.     CHRONICLES    VI.,    28,    34, 

IL    CHRONICLES   IX., 

15,     16, 

Joshua,  350. 

Psalms,  335. 

I.  CHRONICLES  VII.,  5,   Psalms 

17,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

369- 

I.,  274. 

IL  CHRONICLES  XL,  15 

,  Leviti- 

20-27,  Joshua,  22, 

cus,  370, 

//.   CHRONICLEi, 

•  XIV.— CHURCH                      8f) 

II 

CHRONICLES      XIV.,      11, 

II.    CHRONICLES     XXXIV.,     6, 

Joshua,  144. 

Jeremiah  I.,  24,  yy,   120, 

— 

^2y,  John  Epistles,   183. 

9,  Jeremiah  I.,  yy,  120. 

II.  CHRONICLES  XIX,  5,  Dcuter- 

i:S^  Jeremiah  I.,  132. 

onomy,  387. 

II.  CHRONICLES  XXXV.,  20,  Jer- 

—9, Twelve  Prophets  IL,   140. 

emiah  I.,  289. 

II 

CHRONICLES  XX.,  2,  Psalms 

22,  Twelve  Prophets  IL,  482; 

n.,  433. 

Revelation,  2-j2. 

— 

—3,  Ezra,  128. 

24,  Jeremiah  I.,  27. 

—7,     Proverbs,     235;     Romans, 

25,  Song  of  Solomon,  yy\  Jere- 

104; Galatians,  186. 

miah  I.,  25. 

— 

—20,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  75. 

IL    CHRONICLES    XXXVL,    23, 

II.  CHRONICLES  XXIII.,  1 7,  Jere- 

Twelve  Prophets  IL,  69. 

miah  I.,  97. 

CHRYSOSTOM,    John,    Ecclesias- 

II. 

CHRONICLES  XXIV.,  21,  He- 

tes, 204;  Acts  I.,  113;  IL,  46, 

brews,  264. 

55,    84,    251,    276,    352;    IL 

-22,  Jeremiah  i.,   159. 

Corinthians,  13,  93,  123,  129, 

-2-j,  Twelve  Prophets,  505. 

137,  281,  317,  Z7y,  Galatians, 

II. 

CHRONICLES      XXV.,     12, 

143,  225,  457;  Pastoral  Epis- 

Psalms III.,  402. 

tles,  34,  56,  95,  loi,  249,  349, 

IL 

CHRONICLES  XXVL,  16,  Jer- 

369,   2i^2,    397,    429;  James, 

emiah  I.,  92. 

292,  33i»  2i2>'^,  368;  John  Epis- 

IL 

CHRONICLES   XXVIIL,    22>, 

tles,    9,    26,    50,    57,    58,   82, 

Isaiah  I.,  99. 

202, 

IL 

CHRONICLES     XXIX.,     23, 

CHURCH,    The,    and    the    body, 

Psalms  III.,  186. 

Ephesians,  143-154. 

-31,  Leviticus,  208. 

and  infidelity,  Judges,   168. 

II. 

CHRONICLES   XXX.,  6,    11, 

and    the    irresolute.   Numbers, 

Jeremiah  I.,  129. 

107. 

— 

-8,  Jeremiah  II. ,  291. 

and  poverty.  Job,  294. 

-II,  18,  Jeremiah  L,   120. 

andstate.  Chronicles,  166,  167. 

IL 

CHRONICLES     XXXIL,     i, 

Anticipations  of  the  victory  of, 

Isaiah  I.,  304. 

Revelation,  65-85. 

-7,  8,  Revelation,  66. 

attacked.  Judges,   186. 

-9-23.  Isaiah  I.,  304. 

based    on   fellowship.   Exodus, 

II. 

CHRONICLES    XXXIIL,     7, 

77^  359. 

Ezekiel,  84. 

Basis   for   unity   of,    I.    Corin- 

— 

-II,  Twelve  Prophets  II. ,   11. 

thians,  41. 

-13  17,  Daniel,  175. 

Catholic,  I.  Corinthians,  23. 

IL 

CHRONICLES  XXXIV.,  3,  Jer- 

 Christ  and  the,  Ephesians,  366- 

emiah  I.,  15,  97,  loS. 

379,  Colossians,  81-84,  94-99. 

90 


CHURCH— CISTERCIANS 


CHURCH,  Coldness  of,  Exodus, 
1 06. 

Community  of  goods  in,  Acts 

I.,  193-210. 

Complaints  against,  Job,  264. 

Consciousness     of,      Hebrews, 

187. 

customs,  Hebrews,  187. 

discipline,  H.  Corinthians,  72- 

83- 

" ever  in  Paul's  thought,  Ephe- 

sians,  193. 

Fellowship  in,  Joshua,  163. 

First  great  enemy  of.  Revela- 
tion, 196-216. 

First   persecution  of,   Acts  I., 

173-192. 

Foes  of,  Ephesians,  317-409. 

Growth    of,    Ephesians,     244- 

258. 

Helpers  of.  Numbers,  113. 

Honesty    and  pretence  in  the 

primitive,  Acts  I.,  211-228. 

Idea  of,  Hebrews,  185. 

Ideal,  Pastoral  Epistles,  116. 

Life,  Ephesians,  211-258. 

Membership  in,  Ezra,  326. 

Mistaken  claims  of,  Numbers, 

176. 

must  be  filled  with  the  Spirit, 

Judges,  152. 

National,  Numbers,  21. 

Need  of  machinery  in,  Pastoral 

Epistles,  331-342. 

Never  in  danger,  Judges,  187. 

■ on  the  field  of  history.  Revela- 
tion, 21-64. 

one  foundation,  II.  Corin- 
thians, 35-46. 

Opposition  to,  Judges,  79,  ?>2. 

Origin  of  the  idea,  Isaiah  I., 

126, 


CHURCH,     Perils     of,     Numbers, 

115- 

Perpetual  duty  of.  Judges,  353. 

Position  of.  Numbers,  20. 

Primitive  discussions  in.  Acts 

I.,  246-267. 
Real    work  of,  Thessalonians, 

277. 

Right  spirit  of.  Judges,  152, 

Second  and  third  great  enemies 

of.  Revelation,  217-237. 
should  keep  close  to  its  ideal, 

Deuteronomy,  188. 

True,  I.  Corinthians,  21. 

Unity    of.    Numbers,    203;    I. 

Corinthians,  23-25,  284-286. 

Union  of,  Acts  I.,  86-89. 

World  in.  Judges,  133. 

CHURCH,    Dean    R.    W.,  Ezekiel, 

255;  John  I.,  281. 
CICERO,   Ecclesiastes,    137,   253; 

Daniel,  216;  Acts  I.,  56,  298; 

II.,  275,  304,  327. 
CIRCUMCISION,  Genesis,  166. 
and    uncircumcision,   Romans, 

Controversy    about,   Acts  II., 

222-228,      392,    425;    Philip- 

pians,  178-180, 
of    the    Galatians,  Galatians, 

301,  315- 

of  the  heart.  Genesis,  167. 

of  Israel  at  the  Jordan,  Joshua, 

117-121. 
of  Timothy,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

22. 
Ordinance    of,   Leviticus,   315- 

319- 

The  true,  Colossians,  199-212. 

CISTERCIANS,  Acts  I.,  174;  II., 

227. 


CITIES  OF  REFUGE— COLOSSI ANS 


91 


CITIES  OF  REFUGE,  Numbers, 
400;  Joshua,  326-339. 

CIVILIZATION  and  Christianity, 
Twelve  Prophets,  151;  Mark, 
94. 

and  judgment,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets, 141-155. 

of  the  Akkadians,  Deuteron- 
omy, 208,  209. 

without     morality.    Numbers, 

CLARKE,  Adam,  Acts  I.,  3. 
CLAUDIA,  Pastoral  Epistles,  415. 
CLAUDIUS,      Pastoral     Epistles, 

414,  425. 

CLAUDIUS,  the  Emperor,  II.  Cor- 
inthians, ?>^\  Hebrews,  318. 

CLEANTHES'  hymn  to  Zeus,  Ec- 
clesiastes,  199;  Acts  IL,  315; 
Pastoral  Epistles,  225. 

CLEMENT  OF  ALEXANDRIA, 
Acts  I.,  286,  344;  II.,  180, 
356,  446;  Pastoral  Epistles, 
6,  97,  100,  228,  339,  2i7yy 
James,  4,  5,  21,  z^,  76,  213, 
307,  362,  369,  422;  Peter  VL; 
John  Epistles,  2^;^. 

CLEMENT  OF  ROME,  Acts  I.,  3, 
273,  280,  400;  IL,  259,  344; 
Pastoral  Epistles,  5,  14,  97, 
no,  416;  James,  18,  20,  23, 
160,  215,  245,  292,  295; 
Peter  XII. 

CLEMENT  IV.,  Jeremiah  IL,  91. 

CLEMENTINE  LITERATURE, 
Acts  I.,  79. 

CLERGY  and  laity,  James,  324. 

and    laity   distinct,    Pastoral 

Epistles,  109. 

CLOKE,   Pastoral  Epistles,  412. 

CLOPAS,  James,  26,  27. 


CLOTHING,  Symbolism  of.  Gene- 
sis, 24. 

CLOUD  as  a  symbol,  Numbers,  93. 

in  Isaiah,  Numbers,  90. 

The  pillar  of  the.  Numbers,  89. 

COCCEIUS,  Hebrews,  126. 

CODEX  AMIANTHUS,  John  Epis- 
tles, VII. 

COLERIDGE,  S.  T.,  Proverbs,  16; 
Hebrews,  304. 

CALLECTION  for  Jewish  Chris- 
tians, Pastoral  Epistles,  205. 

COLOSSE,  The  church,  Colossi- 
ans,  2-4. 

The  city,  Colossians,  3. 

Errors  of  the  church  at,  Colos- 
sians, 185-198;  Hebrews,  22. 

COLOSSIANS,  The  people,  Paul 
striving  for,  Colossians,  151- 
167. 

COLOSSIANS,  The  Epistle,  He- 
brews, 22. 

closing   messages,   Colossians, 

402-416. 

The  prayer  of,  Colossians,  38- 

54. 

The  prelude  to,  Colossians,  21- 

37' 

Transition  to  Polemics  in,  Co- 
lossians, 168-184. 

Writers  and  readers  of,  Colos- 
sians, 1-20. 

COLOSSIANS  I.,  2,  Ephesians,  18; 
Revelation,  369. 

4,  Galatians,  229;   Ephesians, 

13,  66. 

6,  Ephesians,  56. 

8,  Ephesians,  432;  James,  455. 

9,  27,  Ephesians,  341. 

10,  Romans,  395. 

II,    Ephesians,    398;    Philip- 

pians,  357;  James,  292. 


02 


COLO  SSI ANS  I.—COLOSSIANS  IV. 


COLOSSIANS     I.,    12-14,    Ephes- 
ians,  43. 

13,  Ephesians,  402. 

14,  15,  Ephesians,  27,  61,376; 

Hebrews,  176;  John  Epistles, 
114. 

15,    16,    Romans,   227;  Gala- 

tians,  23,  157,  233,  250; Ephe- 
sians, 93,  146,  288,  354;  He- 
brews, 22;  Revelation,  81. 

16,   Romans,   318;  Ephesians, 

90,  2i7^\  Hebrews,  16;  Peter, 
301. 

18,  Ephesians,  86,  87. 

19,  Ephesians,  93. 

20,   Leviticus,    189,  198,  207; 

I.  Kings,  220. 

22,  28,  29,  Ephesians,  246. 

22i,  Romans,   226;  Ephesians, 

115,  410. 
24,    Mark,   291;  H.   Corinthi- 
ans, 13;  Galatians,  455;  Ephe- 
sians, 427. 

25,  Ephesians,  45,  157. 

26,   Ephesians,   21,    129,  162; 

Pastoral  Epistles,  132. 

26,  27,  Pastoral  Epistles,  132; 

Revelation,  78. 

2T,    Pastoral    Epistles,     134; 

James,    115;   Revelation,  2>^2^ 
369- 
COLOSSIANS  H.,    i,    Ephesians, 

13,  15,  427- 
2,    Romans,    17,    368;    Ephe- 
sians,   45,    157,  414;   Pastoral 
Epistles,  132,  134. 

4,  Ephesians,  41;  James,  104. 

5,     Ephesians,    410;    Thessa- 

lonians,  209. 

7,  James,  456. 

8,   20,  Galatians,   246;   Ephe- 
sians, 250,  279,  408. 


COLOSSIANS  II.,  9,  Mark,  354; 
Galatians, 250;  Ephesians, 345. 

10,  II,  Leviticus,  316;  Ephe- 
sians, 113. 

II,  Leviticus,  320;  Galatians, 

i73>  232,  352;  Ephesians,  371. 

13,  Ephesians,  312. 

15,  11.  Corinthians,  ^y;  Gala- 
tians, 218;  Ephesians,  12. 

16,  Leviticus,  281. 

18,  Exodus,  145. 

19,  Mark,  382;  Ephesians,  249, 

257- 

20,  Ephesians,  262. 

22^,  Romans,  222. 

COLOSSIANS  III.,    I,   Ephesians, 

91,  408. 
3,  4,  Romans,  139;  Ephesians, 

25- 
4,   Galatians,  256;  Ephesians, 

262;    Pastoral  Epistles,  404; 

Revelation,  19. 

5,  Galatians,  352. 

5,   8,   9,   Numbers,  41;   Peter, 

155- 

7,  John  Epistles,  125. 

10,  11.  Corinthians,  168;  Gala- 
tians, 233. 

II,    Chronicles,   49;   Luke,   3; 

Galatians,  160;  Ephesians, 
135;  Revelation,  80. 

13,  Ephesians,  312. 

14,  Ephesians,  216. 

16,  Ephesians,  217,  347,  385; 

Pastoral  Epistles,  394. 

18,  Ephesians,  355,  360. 

22,  Peter,  96. 

24,  Ephesians,  389. 

25,  Galatians,  114. 

COLOSSIANS  IV.,  2,  Ephesians, 
423;  Thessalonians,  225. 


COLOSSIANS  IV.— CONSCIENCE 


93 


COLOSSIANS  IV.,  3,  Ephcsians, 
428,  429;  Pastoral  Epistles, 
132. 

5,  Ephesians,  339, 

7-9,  Ephesians,  15,  431;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  411. 

8,  Ephesians,  432, 

9,  Ephesians,  434. 

10,  Acts  II.,  252,  255;  James, 


2S. 


Philip- 


12,     Ephesians,     341; 

pians,  166. 

14,  Pastoral  Epistles,  410. 

17,  Colossians,  422. 

18,  Thessalonians,  395. 

COMFORT  for  hearts,  Colossians, 

156-158. 
— in  Christ,  Philippians,  99,  100. 

in   the  death    of   children,    II, 

Samuel,  287. 

COMMERCE,  Isaiah  I.,  290-297. 

among  the  Israelites,  Deuter- 
onomy, 360. 

Competition       of.      Proverbs, 

226;  Ecclesiastes,  168. 

of    Solomon,    I.    Kings,    224, 

COMMISSION,  The  great,  Mat- 
thew, 137-141,  443- 

of  Paul,  Galatians,  68-82. 

COMMUNION  OFFICE,  Evening, 
Acts  II.,  398-401. 

Rubrics  of.  Acts  II.,  335,  ^;^6. 

COMMUNICATIO  IDIOMATUM, 
Acts  II.,  49. 

COMMUNITY  OF  GOODS,  Acts 
Im  193-228. 

COMPARISONS,  Paul  on,  II.  Cor- 
inthians, 300-31 1. 

COMPASSION,  A  heart  of,  Colos- 
sians, 307,  308. 

of  Christ,  Luke,  266. 


COMPASSION  of  God,  Numbers, 
213;   Song  of    Solomon,  311- 

COMPETITION,  Proverbs,  226; 
Ecclesiastes,  168;  Twelve 
Prophets  I.,  395. 

COMPLAINTS  against  Provi- 
dence, Numbers,  119. 

of  the  Israelites,  Numbers,  1 19, 

COMPROMISE  not  allowable,  II. 
Kings,    57. 

The  tendency  to,  Joshua,  274; 

Judges,  88,  92,  404. 

COMTE  Auguste,  Ephesians,  315. 

CONCENTRATION,  Judges,  175. 

and  breadth.  Judges,  275. 

CONCUBINAGE  recognized,  Le- 
viticus, 404. 

CONDUCT,  Christian,  based  on 
truth,  Romans,  320-335. 

Details    of  personal,   Romans, 

336-347. 

Worship  and,  James,  ^20-^,22. 

CONFESSION     and     forgiveness, 

Ezra,     141;     Proverbs,    364; 

Romans,  2y2. 

of  sins,  James,  335-343- 

CONFIRMATION,  The  Rite,  Acts 

I-,  375  sq.,  385  sq. 
CONFLICT  of  faith,  Hebrews,  272- 

289. 
CONFUCIUS,  Ecclesiastes,  315. 
CONSCIENCE,     Proverbs,     225, 

252,  343;  Isaiah  L,  8-14. 
as  a  revelation    of  God,    He- 
brews, 3. 

Birth  of,  Genesis,  19, 

Compromise  with,  Ecclesiastes, 

200,  222. 

the  correlative  power,  Judges, 

303. 


94 


CONSCIENCE— CORINTir 


CONSCIENCE  enfeebled  by  Juda- 
ism,   Hebrews,  156. 

enlightened,      Hebrews,      158, 

227,  248. 

its  threefold  character,  Isaiah 

I.,  12. 

Natural,  Hebrews,  152,  155. 

not   satisfied   under   the   law, 

Hebrews,  123. 

of  Cain,  Genesis,  39. 

of  service,  Isaiah  II.,  292-298. 

the  oracle  of  life,  Judges,  353. 

Peace  of.  Genesis,  25. 

Public,  Jeremiah  IL,  219. 

Rekindling  of  the  Civic,  Isaiah 

II.,  408-427. 

Simplicity  of,  Isaiah  I.,  151. 

stifled.  Genesis,  127;  Numbers, 

27%, 

Supremacy  of,  I.  Corinthians, 

190. 

CONSCIOUSNESS,  The  Divine, 
Numbers,  t^i-^. 

CONSECRATION,  Complete,  Le- 
viticus, 225. 

the  condition  of  fellowship  with 

God,  Leviticus,  224. 

Priestly,  Hebrews,  185. 

Self,  Numbers,  2^^. 

CONSOLATION,  Job,  80. 

not  the  only  gift  of  God,  Thes- 

salonians,  353. 

Suffering  and,  II.  Corinthians, 

10-22. 

CONSTANCY  of  Jacob,  Genesis, 
261. 

CONSTANTINE,  The  Emperor, 
Acts  IL,  238,  273. 

CONTEMPORARY,  Acts  L,  199, 
359,  417;  n.,  468. 

CONTENTMENT,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 192-196;  Proverbs,  356. 


CONTROVERSY  not  Christ  like, 

Joshua,  415. 

Religious,  John  Epistles,  40-42. 

Spirit    of.    Pastoral    Epistles, 

280,  364,  2,6%. 
CONYBEARE     AND      HOWSON, 

Life  and  Epistles  of  Paul,  Acts 

L,  217;  IL,  46,  47. 
CONVENTIONALISM,    Isaiah    L, 

261. 
CONVERSATION,     James,      194- 

196. 
CONVERSION,  Thessalonians,  53- 

68. 
and  the  new  life,    Colossians, 

290-304. 
and     the     victory     of    faith. 

Judges,  27. 

Immediate,  Hebrews,  242. 

The  kind  we  need.  Judges,  160. 

not  always  the  same.  Judges, 

159- 
of  Paul,  Acts  IL,  22-47;  Gala- 

tians,  53-82. 
of  sinners  conditions  and  re- 
wards, James,  350-362. 

Results  of,  Proverbs,  368. 

Ruth's,  Judges,  381. 

CONVICTION,  Individual,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 226. 

Power  of.  Exodus,  90. 

CONVOCATION,  Holy,  Numbers, 

352. 
CO-OPERATION,        Ecclesiastes, 

184;  Ephesians,  148. 
COPTIC  CHURCH,  Acts  L,  416. 
CORBAN,  Matthew,  203. 
CORINTH,    Abuse    of  the  Lord's 
Supper  at,  I.  Corinthians,  259- 

272. 
Church  discipline  in,  II.  Corin- 
thians, T2'Zl, 


CORINTH— I.   CORINTHIANS  III. 


05 


CORINTH,  The  church  in,  I. 
Corinthians,  15-29. 

The  city  of,  I.  Corinthians,  3. 

Excommunication  at,  I.  Cor- 
inthians, 113-128, 

Factions  in  the  church  at,  I. 

Corinthians,  31-45. 

Fornication  at,  I.  Corinthians, 

145-159- 

Incest    at,    Pastoral    Epistles, 

71,  265. 

Paul    at.    Acts    II.,    301-330; 

Romans,  5 ;  I.  Corinthians, 
3  sq. 

Paul's  trouble  at,  Romans,  5. 

Religious  services  at,  I.  Corin- 
thians, 319. 

Ruins  of,  I.  Corinthians,  ^t^. 

Timothy  at,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 23,  24,  29. 

Titus    at.    Pastoral    Epistles, 

204-206. 

Vice  of,  I.  Corinthians,  4. 

CORINTHIANS,  First  Epistle, 
Acts  H.,  359,  387. 

Introduction,  I.    Corinthians, 

3  14. 

I.  CORINTHIANS  I.,  2,  Acts  I., 
339;  II.,  60;  Ephesians,  18; 
John  Epistles,  116;  Revela- 
tion, 369 

4-9,  Ephesians,  115. 

6,  Thessalonians,  288. 

7,  Galatians,  57. 

8,  Phiiippians,  25. 

10,  Galatians,  394. 

II,  16,  Pastoral  Epistles,  361. 

12,  Galatians,  57. 

14,   17,  Acts    II.,    326;    John 

Epistles,  301. 

17,  Acts  II.,  340. 

18,  23;  II.  Corinthians,  152. 


I.  CORINTHIANS,  23,  Galatians, 
2»2:S,  380. 

26-28;  I.  Kings,  51, 

27-31,  Galatians,  114.' 

28,  Ephesians,  18. 

30,  Ephesians,  40;  Revelation, 

369,  Z'^l' 

^2>i  Romans,  242. 

I.  CORINTHIANS  II.,  i,  7,  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  132;  Peter,  262. 

2,  Peter,  183. 

3,  Galatians,  276,  277;  Phii- 
ippians, 132. 

4,  n.  Corinthians,  231. 

6-9,       Ephesians,      45,      253; 

James,  170. 

8,    Acts   n.,   419;   Galatians, 

380. 

9,  Daniel,  102;  II.  Corinthians, 

169;  James,  233. 

12,  Galatians,  246;  Ephesians, 

25;  James,  230;  Revelation, 
224. 

14,  Mark,  108;  James,  200. 

15,  Ephesians,  96. 

16,  Hebrews,  201. 

I.  CORINTHIANS  III.,  1-3,  Gala- 
tians,  246;  Ephesians,  253. 

5-1 1,  Galatians,  2i^. 

10-15,  Galatians,  401. 

11-15,  Romans,  386;    James, 

456. 

13,    Ezra,    216;    Jeremiah    I., 

239;  Peter,  340. 

15,  Romans,  2t^6. 

1 6,  Leviticus,  186;  Ephesians, 

9. 

17,  II.  Corinthians,  250;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  131. 

19,  James,  295. 

20,  James,  123. 


90 


/.   CORINTHIANS  III.— I.   CORINTHIANS  IX. 


I.  CORINTHIANS  III.,  21-23,  Ga- 
latians,  241. 

22,   Romans,   241;   Galatians, 

25,  57. 

I.  CORINTHIANS  IV.,  1-5,  Gala- 
tians, 401;  Ephesians,  45. 

2,  Daniel,  223;  Hebrews,  54. 

3,  4,  Galatians,  14,  2^6. 

4,  II.  Corinthians,  175. 

5,  Pastoral  Epistles,  424. 

9,    Galatians,   30,   57;   Philip- 

pians,  356. 

14-16,  Galatians,  281,  408. 

15,  II.  Corinthians,  364. 

17,    Acts    II.,    359;    Pastoral 

Epistles,  20. 

18-21,  Galatians,  45. 

21,  II.  Corinthians,  60;  Gala- 
tians, 394. 

I.  CORINTHIANS  V.,  i,  Leviticus, 
381;  Pastoral  Epistles,  361; 
Revelation,  54. 

3,  Romans,  375. 

5,  James,  184. 

6-8,  Galatians,  2>^?>\  Revela- 
tion, 51. 

7,    Leviticus,    y^,    458;   Ezra, 

105. 

9-1 1,  Galatians,  364;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  2i?i7\  James, 
378. 

10,  Thessalonians,  142. 

1.  CORINTHIANS  VI.,  i,  Acts  I., 
270;  Romans,  81. 

2,  Daniel,  102;  James,  126. 

7,  Romans,  345. 

9,  Galatians,  185,  355;  Ephe- 
sians, 295;  James,  56. 

10,  Thessalonians,  142. 

II,    Pastoral    Epistles,     29)y\ 

Revelation,  323. 

13,   Romans,   221;  Galatians, 

363;  Pastoral  Epistles,  424. 


I.  CORINTHIANS  VI.,  15, 
Romans,  160. 

— — 16,  17,  Exodus,  293. 

17,    Romans,    162,    181,    182, 

T^TiT,  Galatians,  160;  Ephe- 
sians, 71. 

19,    Acts    I.,    384;   Galatians, 

252;  Ephesians,  53. 

20,    Leviticus,    302;   Romans, 

221. 

I.  CORINTHIANS  VII.,  i,  7,  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  123,  157. 

2,  9,  Pastoral  Epistles,  124. 

5,  Mark,  64. 

10,    12,  34,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

424. 

16,  Peter,  115. 

17,    Acts    L,     T^'&T,. 

17,  19,  Galatians,  160. 

18,  20,  Acts  II.,  435;  Gala- 
tians, 440. 

19,  Jeremiah  I.,  207. 

21,  Peter,  97. 

22,  James,  '^2. 

26,  Matthew,  270. 

2?),  36,  Pastoral  Epistles,  123. 

29,  Revelation,  341. 

31,  Leviticus,  366;  Galatians, 

30. 

35,  Thessalonians,  163. 

39,  Leviticus,  437. 

I.  CORINTHIANS  VIIL,  i,  Daniel, 
165;  Galatians,  380. 

4,  Jeremiah  I.,  80;  Galatians, 

259- 

6,  Galatians,  220. 

7,  Hebrews,  155. 

I.  CORINTHIANS  IX.,  i,  Gala- 
tians, 14,  57. 

2,  Ephesians,  53, 

5,  Luke,  157;  James,  2?>,  374; 

Peter  IX.,  230. 


/.   CORINTHIANS   VIII.- 

-/.   CORINTHIANS  XIV.       97 

I.  CORINTHIANS    VIII,   6,  Acts 

I.  CORINTHIANS    XL,  19,  Gala^ 

II..  258. 

tians,  371;    Pastoral  Epistles, 

9,  Twelve  Prophets  I,   2«.S. 

294,  297,  298. 

10,     Pastoral     Epistles,     343; 

21,    Peter,  305. 

James,  233. 

23,  Acts  II.,  49. 

II,  Galatians,  406. 

24,  Matthew,  392. 

13,   Leviticus,    146,  179;  Pas- 

 25,    Jeremiah     II. ,     362. 

toral  Epistles,  390. 

2&,  Matthew,  389. 

14,  Peter,  207. 

29,  James,  168;  John  Epistles, 

17,  Pastoral  Epistles,  52. 

175- 

20,  Galatians,  62. 

30,  James,  334. 

21,  Galatians,  281. 

2,2,   Ephesians,   385;  Pastoral 

22,  Romans,  St,,  299. 

Epistles,  75;  Peter,  192. 

24,  Revelation,  257. 

30-32,     Leviticus,     243;     Pas- 

 25,  Pastoral  Epistles,  343,  350. 

toral  Epistles,  361. 

I.  CORINTHIANS  X,  Leviticus,  83. 

I.    CORINTHIANS    XIL,    i,    Ro- 

 1,  Romans,  29. 

mans,  29. 

1-4,  Acts  IL,  19. 

3,  Acts  IL,  27;  Galatians,  44, 

2,  Ephesians,  371;  Peter,  159. 

56. 

3,    Exodus,    244;    Revelation, 

4,9,  22>,  30,  31,  Romans,  27; 

203. 

Galatians,   170. 

6-8,  Galatians,  ^66. 

6,  Ephesians,  93. 

II,  Galatians,  259;  Ephesians, 

7,  Peter,  172. 

385;    Peter,    164;   Revelation, 

7,  10,  Pastoral   Epistles,  242. 

182. 

10,  Thessalonians,  242. 

21,  Isaiah  II.,  457. 

24,  Thessalonians,   163. 

26,  Pastoral  Epistles,  424. 

28,   Pastoral  Epistles,  66,  69, 

2y,  Pastoral  Epistles,  236. 

115. 

29,  Peter  XIV. 

1.  CORINTHIANS  XIIL,  1-3,  Gala- 

 31,    Leviticus,    68,   301;    Pas- 

tians, 379. 

toral  Epistles,  258. 

3,  Pastoral  Epistles,  423. 

:^T„  Philippians,   160. 

4,  James,  22T,. 

I.   CORINTHIANS  XL,  I.  Thessa- 

7,  Galatians,  3S4,  3S5. 

lonians,   44;   Peter,   209,  248, 

8,  II,  12,  Galatians,  412. 

361. 

9,  Romans,  144. 

2,     Acts    L,    383;    Ephesians, 

II,  Ephesians,  246. 

356;  Pastoral  Epistles,   100. 

12,  II.  Corinthians,  182. 

3-12,  Ephesians,  ^jj. 

13,  Peter,  167. 

7,  Peter,  115. 

1.   CORINTHIANS  XIV.,   6,  John 

i3-i5»  Ephesians,  358. 

Epistles,  293. 

17-34>  Ephesians,  342. 

14-18,  IL  Corinthians,   192. 

98        /.  CORINTHIANS  XIV.- 

-/.   CORINTHIANS  XVI. 

I.      CORINTHIANS      XIV.,      15, 

I.    CORINTHIANS     XV.,     24-28, 

James,  319. 

Ephesians,  47,  90,  203. 

16,  Acts  XL,  396. 

26,  Galatians,  308;  Ephesians, 

18,  Acts  I.,  98;  Galatians,  67; 

52. 

Pastoral  Epistles,  242. 

27,  Hebrews,  35. 

20,    Ephesians,     253;     Philip- 

28,  Revelation,  190. 

pians,  269. 

T^o,  ^2,  Galatians,  30,  451. 

23,  Peter,  167. 

31,  James,  307. 

26,    Ephesians,     239;    James, 

32,  Acts  II.,   357;   II.    Corin- 

167. 

thians,  27. 

29,  Thessalonians,  242. 

S:i,    Pastoral    Epistles,    224; 

32,  Romans,  331. 

James,  56. 

2,T„  James,  201. 

33,  34,  Ephesians,  269. 

35,  Ephesians,  362. 

34,  Peter,  90. 

I.    CORINTHIANS  XV.,   i,  Gala- 

 35-54j  Matthew,  325;  James, 

tians,  56;  Thessalonians,  65. 

56. 

1-8,  Mark,  2. 

37,  38,  Exodus,  72. 

3,  Romans,  95;  Ephesians,  2t^; 

40,  48,  Ephesians,  49. 

Revelation,  47. 

^41,  Daniel,  324. 

3,  4,  Peter,  183. 

^42,  Ephesians,  439, 

5-8,    Pastoral    Epistles,     138; 

44,  Luke,  337. 

Peter  IX. 

44,    46,    James,   200;  Revela- 

 6,  Matthew,  437;  Romans,  127. 

tion,  354. 

7,    Romans,   127;  James,   26, 

45,    47,    Romans,    148;  Gala- 

35. 

tians,  157;  Ephesians,  246. 

7,  James,  35. 

51,    Ephesians,    86;    Pastoral 

8,  Acts  II.,  44;   Romans,    17; 

Epistles,  132;  James,  297. 

Galatians,   57,    152;   Pastoral 

53,  Pastoral  Epistles,  428. 

Epistles,  55. 

54,  55,  57,  John  Epistles,  232. 

9,  Acts  II.,  26;  James,  126. 

55,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  306. 

9,  10,  Galatians,  114. 

56,  Galatians,  213. 

10,    Galatians,  96,   119,   121, 

L  CORINTHIANS  XVI.,  i,  2,  Le- 

401. 

viticus,  563. 

II,  Galatians,  118. 

1-4,   Romans,  416;  Galatians, 

15,  2  Corinthians,  304. 

126. 

20,  Leviticus,  458;  Revelation, 

2,  Galatians,  269. 

244. 

9,  II.  Corinthians,  27. 

20-57,  Galatians,  198. 

10,  II.   Corinthians,  258;  Co- 

22,  Galatians,  157;  Ephesians, 

lossians,  403. 

47- 

13,  Ephesians,  186,  253,  410; 

23,  24,  Revelation,  346. 

Peter,  330. 

/.  CORINTHIANS  XVI.— IL  CORINTHIANS  V. 


I.  CORINTHIANS  XVI.,  i5,Thes- 

salonians,       202;         Pastoral 

Epistles,  361;  Revelation,  244. 

19,    Acts    II.,    351;    Romans, 

423,  427. 

20,  Peter,  231. 

21,    Acts    II.,    50;    Galatians, 

422;  Thessalonians,  395. 
22,     Pastoral    Epistles,    428; 

Peter,  163. 
CORINTHIANS,    Second    Epistle, 

Introduction,   II.  Corinthians, 

1-9. 
Conclusion  of,  II.  Corinthians, 

II.  CORINTHIANS  I.,  3,  Ephe- 
sians,  6^,  no;  Peter,  18. 

4,  Leviticus,  436. 

5,  Peter,  34. 

8,  Romans,  29;  Galatians,  2)^, 

451- 

10,  Galatians,  452. 

12,  Galatians,  401. 

17,  i8,  22^,  Galatians,  ^?,. 

18,    Ephesians,    292;    James, 

307. 

21,  Leviticus,  216;  Galatians, 

204. 

22,  Ephesians,  64. 

23,  Exodus,  305 ;  James,  307. 

II.  CORINTHIANS  IL,  2,  Colos- 
sians,  loi. 

4,  Galatians,  36,  274. 

5-1 1,  Galatians,  394. 

7,  10,  Ephesians,  312. 

II,  Ephesians,  400;  Thessalo- 
nians, 142. 

12,  13,  Galatians,  36;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  361. 

13,   Acts  IL,   388;  Galatians, 

451. 


IL  CORINTHIANS  14,  17,  Jere- 
miah I.,  422;  Galatians,  431, 
449;    Ephesians,  236. 

16,  Leviticus,  124. 

17,  Galatians,  48,  109. 

18,  Peter,  240. 

II.  CORINTHIANS  III.,  1-3,  Gala- 
tians, 85,  109,  133. 

4-8,      Romans,      185;    Philip- 

pians,  147. 

6,  Jeremiah  IL,  362. 

12,  18,  Exodus,  439;  Gala- 
tians, 71. 

13-18,  Galatians,  218. 

14-16,  Romans,  299. 

17,  Hebrews,  201. 

18,  Galatians,  358;  Ephesians, 

89,  308;  John  Epistles,  181. 

II.  CORINTHIANS  IV.,  2,  Gala- 
tians, 48,  109. 

3,  Mark,  108;  Ephesians,  113. 

4,    Matthew,   167;  Ephesians, 

102,  400;  Peter,  224. 

5,  Ephesians,  389;  Peter,  22^6. 

6,  Galatians,  61. 

7,    Acts   II. ,   415;    Galatians, 

276;  Ephesians,  188. 

8-1 1,  Galatians,  2^6. 

9,  Mark,  433;  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 420. 

10,  Galatians,  454. 

II,  Ephesians,  281. 

14,  Colossians,  102. 

16,  Romans,  200;  Peter,  113. 

18,  Galatians,  403. 

II.  CORINTHIANS  V.,  i-io,  Gala 
tians,  451. 

2-4,  Ephesians,  287. 

4,  Revelation,  354. 

5,  Ephesians,  64. 

7,  Romans,  385. 


100 


//.   CORINTHIANS  V.—II.  CORINTHIANS  XL 


II.     CORINTHIANS      V.,      9-12, 

IL 

CORINTHIANS     VIL,     6-16, 

Galatians,  36. 

Galatians,  452. 

10,   Romans,  386;  John  Epis- 

-8, Galatians,  36,  274. 

tles,  214. 

-9,  Peter,  25. 

10-12,  Galatians,  401. 

-10,  James,  230. 

12,  Galatians,  119. 

-II,  Leviticus,  255, 

13-15J    Leviticus,     227;     Pas- 

-15, Philippians,  132. 

toral  Epistles,  242;  John  Epis- 

II. 

CORINTHIANS   VIIL,    i,    2, 

tles,  47. 

Acts  IL,  293;  Galatians,  56. 

14,  15,  Galatians,  157;  Colos- 

-7,  Leviticus,  166,  565. 

sians,  245. 

-9,  Romans,  404. 

17,  Leviticus,  320;  Galatians, 

-17,  Ephesians,  419. 

60;  Pastoral  Epistles,  288. 

— 

-19,  Pastoral  Epistles,  59. 

18-21,    Ephesians,     36;     John 

-2T^,  Ephesians,  239,  435. 

Epistles,  105. 

H. 

CORINTHIANS  IX,,   2,  Ephe- 

 19,   Ephesians,    127;  Pastoral 

sians,  dy. 

Epistles,  423. 

-9,  Psalms  III.,  203. 

20,  Galatians,  149;  Ephesians, 

IL 

CORINTHIANS   X.,    i,  Gala- 

7. 

tians,  277. 

21,    Exodus,    412;     Leviticus, 

-Ill,  Galatians,  45. 

153,    226;    Isaiah    IL,    287; 

-2,  Galatians,  119. 

Luke,    371;   Philippians,   218, 

-2-5,  Ephesians,  404. 

221. 

-3-6,  Ephesians,  410. 

II.   CORINTHIANS  VI.,    i,   Gala- 

-10, Galatians,  455. 

tians,  149;  James,  351. 

-17,  Galatians,  122. 

4,    10,  Galatians,   30;   Philip- 

— 

-18,  Pastoral  Epistles,  369. 

pians,  356;  James,  292. 

IL 

CORINTHIANS  XL,    i,  Gala- 

 9,  Pastoral  Epistles,  75. 

tians,  122,  169. 

10,  Galatians,  383;  Peter,  25. 

— 

-2,   Mark,  6y,  Ephesians,  246, 

11-13,  Galatians,  408. 

371;  Revelation,  51,  243. 

13,  Galatians,  275. 

-3,  Ephesians,  400. 

14,  Ezra,  151. 

— 

—3,  4,    12,    22,    26,    Galatians, 

15,  Hebrews,  325. 

109. 

. 16,  Exodus,  376. 

—6,  Galatians,  2Tj. 

17,  18,  Isaiah  IL,  454. 

— 

-7,  Mark,  329. 

18,  Galatians,  229, 

—10,    Ephesians,    293;    James, 

IL  CORINTHIANS  VIL,  i,  Leviti- 
cus, 356. 

4,  Ephesians,  430. 

5-7,  Galatians,  36,  451;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  361. 


307- 
-13,    Galatians,     12, 

Ephesians,       239; 

Epistles,  301. 
-13,  Galatians,  133. 


84,    85; 
Pastoral 


//.   CORINTHIANS  XL— COVENANT                  101 

II 

CORINTHIANS  XL,  14,  Kpho- 

CORNILL,    Karl    Heinrich,    Jere- 

sians,  401;  Pastoral   Epistles, 

miah  II.,  315,  319,  2^22;   Eze- 

■j^. 

kiel,  60,   T2,    109,    123,    133, 

—  16,  3 J,  Galatians,  30. 

201,  248,  269,  374,  451,466, 

— 

-23-27,  Galatians,    453;     Phil- 

491;     Daniel,     -jTii     "6,    266, 

ippians,  356. 

272  :    Twelve   Prophets  I.,  22, 

—24,    Acts    I.,    244;  Galatians, 

72>,  173,  192,   204,   225,   301, 

322;    Pastoral   Epistles,   361; 

358;  IL,  41,81,  86,  124,  144, 

James,  127. 

168,  170,  380,  386,  49S. 

-25,  Daniel,  263;  Acts  II.,  285. 

COSIN,    Bishop    John,     Pastoral 

—26,  Galatians,  451. 

Epistles,  328. 

— 

-31,  James,  307;  Peter,  18. 

COUNCIL  OF  HIPPO,  James,  17. 

-2^2,  Acts  II.,  8i. 

COUNCIL  OF  JERUSALEM,  Acts 

-T,2i,  Peter,  182. 

IL,  219-244;  James,  35,  61. 

11. 

CORINTHIANS  XII.,  i,  Gala- 

COUNCIL OF  LIEGE,  James,  341. 

tians,  57,  67,  122. 

COUNCILS,  Histories  of,  Acts  IL, 

— 

-1-7,  Pastoral  Epistles,  242. 

219. 

— 

-3,    7,    18,    Pastoral    Epistles, 

COURT     OF    THE    GENTILES, 

361. 

Acts  I.,  158. 

-4,  Revelation,  14. 

COURTESY,  The  law  of,  Deuter- 

— 

-7,  Song  of  Solomon,  220;  Ro- 

onomy, 420-424. 

mans,    22^1;     Galatians,      277, 

COVENANT  and  mercy,  Ezra,  179. 

278;  Pastoral  Epistles,  78. 

broken,  Jeremiah  I.,  248-279; 

-7-9,  James,  330. 

IL,  141-154- 

-8,  9,  Philippians,  356. 

Impossibility    of    failure,     He- 

— 

-9,     10,    Romans,    345;    Gala- 

brews, 97-108. 

tians,  455;  Revelation,  212. 

Nehemiah  and  the,  Ezra,  307- 

-13,  Leviticus,  179. 

316. 

— 

-15,  Galatians,  281. 

New,    Jeremiah     i.,    121;    IL, 

-19,  Galatians,  36;  James,  307. 

346-356;  Hebrews,  1 31-179. 

-20,  Peter,  63. 

of    promise,    Galatians,     196- 

II. 

CORINTHL\NS    XIIL,     i-io. 

210. 

Galatians,  45. 

Old,   not  renewable,   Hebrews, 

-4, Galatians,  450,  456;  Revela- 

82-96. 

tion,  13. 

Promises  and  threats  of,   Le- 

-5, Romans,  22;  Philippians,  11. 

viticus,  519-540. 

— 

-II,  Galatians,  394;  Ephesians, 

Two,  II.  Corinthians,  112-126. 

435;  Phihppians,  172. 

The    two,    fundamentally    the 

— 

-12,  Peter,  231. 

s   me,  Hebrews,  47-65. 

CORNELIL'S,  the  Centurion,  Acts 

with    Abraham,  Genesis,    134- 

II,  92-141.                                       1 

146,  159-171- 

102 


CO  VENA  N  T—  CROSS 


COVENANT  with    Israel    ratified, 

CRETE,  The  church  in,  Pastoral 

Exodus,  3^7-i7-\- 

Epistles,  212-215,  271. 

with  Noah,  Genesis,  72-ys- 

CRimNOLOGY,      Petting    crimi- 

COVETOUSNESS, Numbers,  272, 

nals,  Leviticus,  429. 

282;        Deuteronomy,         87; 

Punishment,     Leviticus,    421- 

Joshua,    182,    183;  II.  Kings, 

431- 

61;  Job,   330;   Proverbs,   30; 

CRISP,  Dr.  Tobias,  Sermons,  Acts 

Ecclesiastes,    169;   Colossians, 

I-,  134- 

278;  Peter,  287. 

CRISPIN,  St.,  Acts  I.,  161,  162. 

forbidden.  Exodus,  328-330- 

CRISPUS,  Acts  II.,  325,  326. 

COWARDICE  word,  John  II.,  289- 

CRITICISM,  Proverbs,  181. 

293. 

and  faith,  Deuteronomy,  34. 

COWPER,  William,  Romans,  loi. 

and  a  late  kattd,  Deuteronomy, 

COX,  Samuel,  Thessalonians,  299. 

119. 

CRAMER,  J.  A.,  Catena,  Acts  II., 

and  morals,  Philippians,  341. 

46. 

Dangers     of,       Deuteronomy, 

CREATION    and    Christ,    Colos- 

348. 

sians,  76-81. 

Danites,  Judges,  345. 

The  Biblical  account  not  new 

Indifference     to,     Ecclesiastes, 

to  contemporaries.  Genesis,  8. 

201,  224. 

Biblical  account  not  scientific. 

ofsermons,  I.  Corinthians,  loi. 

Genesis,  1-14. 

CROESUS,  Isaiah  IL,  113.  123. 

difficulties  in  the  two  accounts, 

and    the    oracles,    Isaiah    IL, 

Genesis,  3. 

114. 

a  fact.  Genesis,  9. 

defeated  by  Cvrus,  Isaiah  IL, 

Meaning  of.  Psalms  III.,  114. 

M4. 

Poem  of.  Proverbs,  112. 

CROMWELL,  Oliver,  at  the  storm- 

 a  spiritual  conception,  Genesis, 

ing   of   Bristol,    Judges,    117; 

2,  3- 

Isaiah  L,  160-162,  220. 

The  true  theory  gradually  dis- 

CROSS, The,  Attractive  force  of. 

covered.  Genesis,  7. 

John  IL,  45-61. 

Two  accounts.  Genesis,  2,  3. 

the  death  of  law,  Colossians, 

Vastness  of.  Genesis,  12. 

213-220. 

CREDIT     in    modern    commerce. 

Enemies  of,   Philippians,   281- 

Deuteronomy,  370. 

298. 

to  be  preserved,  Proverbs,  79. 

Shadow  of,  Matthew,  142-172. 

CREDNER,  Karl  A.,  Pastoral  Epis- 

 Symbolism  of  the  inscription. 

tles,  8. 

Matthew,  2. 

CREMATION,  Daniel,  177. 

Test  of,  Matthew,  227-233. 

CREMER,      Hermann,      Lexicon, 

to  be  kept  in  sight,  Galatians, 

Calatians,  199. 

23,  167. 

CROSS— CVK  us 


103 


CROSS,  the     triumph    over     evil, 

Colossians,  220-225. 

use  of  the  word.  Hebrews,  281. 

CRUCIFIXION,  Day  of,  Matthew, 

376-428;       Mark,      4^4-431; 

John  II.,  319-347- 
Place  of  the.  Song  of  Solomon, 

75,   76;   Matthew,  422;  Luke, 

396. 

See  Jesus  Christ. 

CRUELTY  and  vanity,  Ezra,   7,72- 

CUDWORTH,  Ralph,  Ititelledtcal 
System,  Acts  II.,  315. 

CULTURE,  Judges,  20,  ?>%. 

afflicting  religion.  Judges,  22?). 

and  humanity,  Exodus,  24. 

CUNNING  of  Saul,  I.  Samuel,  299. 

CURIOSITY  and  temptation,  Gen- 
esis, 21. 

dangerous,  Genesis,  21. 

of  the  men  of  Bethshemesh,  I. 

Samuel,  '&2. 

CURSE  of  Cain,  Genesis,  44. 

CUSH,  a  Benjamite,  Psalm  I.,  58. 

CUSH  ANRISHATHAIM,  Judges, 
69,  ■!2. 

CYNICISM,  Hebrews,  96,  190; 
James,  66,  315. 

Evils  of,  Pastoral  Epistles,  29- 

31. 


CYNICISM,  a  form  of  false  witness, 

Exodus,  2,2"^. 
CYPRIAN,  St.,  Acts  I.,  386;  II., 

401;    Pastoral   Epistles,   295; 

Hebrews,     95;     James,    368; 

Peter  VI.;  John  Epistles,  177. 
CYPRUS,  Acts  I.,  216. 
Gospel  in.  Acts  II.,    196,   201, 

206,  258. 
CYRENIACS,  James,  265. 
CYRIL  OF  JERUSALEM,  Acts  L, 

66;  II.,  396;  Pastoral  Epistles, 

341;  James,  7,  17. 
CYRUS,  Ezra,  12-23;  Ecclesiastes, 

43;   Isaiah  II.,  7-12,  162-176. 
as    messiah,    Isaiah    II.,    167- 

175. 
Capture  of  Babylon,  Isaiah  II., 

146,  178. 

Edict  of,  Ezra,  24-35. 

an  elect  instrument,  Isaiah  II., 

253- 
Greek  and  Hebrew  account  of, 

Isaiah  II.,  164,  169. 
Jehovah's  claim  on,  Isaiah  IL, 

130,  144,  162,  166. 
not   a   monotheist,   Isaiah  II., 

40,   165,  179. 
not  a  prediction  but  fulfillment, 

Isaiah  II.,  9,  1 1,  66,  1 1 1  sq. 


104 


DAILY  WORSHIP— DANIEL   VIII. 


DAILY  WORSHIP,  Numbers,  345. 
DALE,  R.  \V.,  Ephesians,   38,   49, 

192,  356. 
DAMASCUS,    Isaiah    I.,   95,    120, 

122,   274;   Jeremiah   II.,    248- 

250;  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  124; 

Acts  XL,  30,  36. 
DAN,  son  of  Jacob,  blessed  by  his 

father,  Genesis,  441. 
DAN,    the    tribe,    in    the    time    of 

Samson,  Judges,  339. 

Inheritance  of,  Joshua,  322. 

Moses    blesses,    Deuteronomy, 

469. 

stealing  gods.  Judges,  340. 

Daniel  compared  with  Joseph,  Gen- 
esis, T^26,  366. 
Historic  existence  of,  Daniel,  3-12. 
in  the  lions  den,   Daniel,   218- 

230. 
DANIEL,  the  Book,   Daniel,  113- 

122;  Revelation,  176. 
apocalyptic     section,     Daniel, 

71-77. 
authorities    consulted,   Daniel, 

IX-XII. 
Chronological    tables,    Daniel, 

concluding  vision,  Daniel,  292- 

318. 

Epilogue  of,  Daniel,  319-332. 

External  evidence,  Daniel,  98- 

112. 
General    structure    of,    Daniel, 

62,-66. 
•- — General  tone  of,  Daniel,  2y-2g. 


DANIEL,  Genuineness  not  certain, 

Daniel,  88-97. 
Internal  evidence,   Daniel,   y^- 

87. 

Language  of,  Daniel,  13-23. 

Moral  element  of,   Daniel,  34- 

Peculiarities  of  historical  sec- 
tion, Daniel,  39-62. 

The    Ram    and    the    He-goat, 

Daniel,  252-267. 

The  seventy  weeks,  Daniel,  268- 

291. 

Standpoint  of,  Daniel,  31-33. 

Style  of,  Daniel,  29-30, 

Theology  of,  Daniel,  67-70. 

Unity  of,  Daniel,  24-26. 

DANIEL  I.,  6,  II.  Kings,  317, 
424. 

DANIEL  III.,  6,  H.  Kings,  312. 

22,,  Revelation,  181. 

27,  2?,,  Hebrews,  263. 

DANIEL  IV.,  30,  Jeremiah  II.,  71. 

DANIEL  VI.,  22,  Hebrews,  263. 

DANIEL  VII.,  2-S,  Revelation,  219. 

7,  8,  Revelation,  286. 

8,  Revelation,  236. 

9,  Peter,  339. 

10,  Hebrews,  301. 

13,  14,  Mark,  411;  Ephesians, 

47. 

17,  23,  Revelation,  284. 

25,  Revelation,  177. 

DANIEL    VIII.,     10,    Revelation, 

202. 
17,  Revelation,  17. 


DANIEL  IX.— DAVID 


105 


DANIEL  IX..  4,  Deuteronomy,  1 2^. 

DAVID,   and   Hanun,   II.   Samuel, 

5,  Psalms  III.,   142. 

146-157- 

25,  Isaiah  I.,  131, 

and  Jonathan,  I.  Samuel,  292, 

2y,  Revelation,  177. 

2>^7-2>2^.  360. 

DANIEL  X.,  5,  Jeremiah  I.,  232. 

and  the  king  of  Tyre,  IL  Sam- 

 13,  21,  Revelation,  205. 

uel,  y2>. 

DANIEL    XL,    7,    20,    21,    Ephe- 

and  Mephibosheth,  II.  Samuel, 

sians,  416. 

134-145- 

29,  Jeremiah  I.,  342. 

and    Nabal,    I.    Samuel,    T^y^- 

31,  Song  of  Solomon,  118. 

390. 

DANIEL  XIL,  1-3,  Revelation,  206. 

and    Uriah,    IL    Samuel,    158- 

2,  Ezekiel,  350. 

168. 

4,  Revelation,  379. 

at    Adullam,    I.  Samuel,   341- 

12,  Peter,  2,2,2. 

344- 

DANTE,    Daniel,    141,    163;   Mat- 

 at    Hareth,    L    Samuel,    345- 

thew,  362;  John  Epistles,  3. 

351- 

John  Morley  on,  Deuteronomy, 

at  Keilah,  Ziph  and   Maon,   I. 

488. 

Samuel,  354-365- 

State  of,  Job,  35. 

at  Nob  and  Gath,  I.   Samuel, 

DAPHNE,  Acts  IL,  157,  158. 

329-340. 

DARBY,  J.  N.,  Acts  L,  2>^2. 

at  Ziklag,  I.  Samuel,  379. 

DARIUS,  Ezra,  72,  9599;  Ecclesi- 

brings  the  ark  to  Jerusalem, 

astes,  52;  Daniel,  57. 

IL  Samuel,  85-96. 

DARKNESS,   The  plague  of,  Exo- 

 Burial  of,  I.  Kings,  103-104. 

dus,   i6i-i66. 

compared  with  Joseph,  Gene- 

DARWIN,  Charles,   Proverbs,  16; 

sis,  326. 

Isaiah   L,    191-193;   Matthew, 

compared  with  Saul,  I.  Samuel, 

167;     Pastoral    Epistles,    2^^ 

216. 

James,  56;  John  Epistles,  249. 

Conquests  of,  Joshua,  254. 

DATHAN  and  Abiram,  Numbers, 

Court  life  of,  I.  Kings,   70-80. 

195.  205. 

Death   bed    of,    I.    Kings,    94- 

DAVID,  Absaloms  revolt,  IL  Sam- 

104. 

uel,  217-228. 

Decrepitude    of,   I.   Kings,   61- 

Administration    of    the    king- 

69- 

dom  of,  IL  Samuel,   1 21-133. 

Domestic  troubles  of,  II.  Sam- 

 and  Barzillai,  IL  Samuel,  301- 

uel,  193-216. 

313- 

Early  life  of,   I.   Samuel,    265- 

and  the  civil  war,  II.   Samuel, 

277. 

26-49. 

escapes  by  the  aid  of  Michal, 

and  Goliath,   I.   Samuel,    278- 

I.  Samuel,  307. 

291. 

Faith  of,  Hebrews,  263. 

106 


DA  VID^DA  VIDSON 


DAVID,  Famine  in  the  reign  of, 
II.  Samuel,  2i2(i-2i^7- 

flees  from  Jerusalem,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 229-240. 

flees  to  Mahanaim,  II.  Samuel, 

341-352. 

flees  to  Samuel,  I.  Samuel,  312. 

Foreign    wars  of,   II.   Samuel, 

109-120. 

grief  for  Absalom,  II.  Samuel, 

277-288. 

harper    to    Saul,    I.    Samuel, 

267. 

Insurrection  of  Sheba,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 314-325- 

Jesus  Christ  the  Lord  of,  Mark, 

341-343- 

Justification  of,  Romans,  iio- 

114. 

Last    battles    of,    II.    Samuel, 

338-349. 
Last  prayer  of,  Chronicles,  313- 

319- 
Last    words    of,    II.    Samuel, 

362-375- 
made  King  of   all    Israel,    II. 

Samuel,  62-72. 
marriage    of,   I.   Samuel,   301- 

304- 

marries  Abigail,  I.  Samuel,  388. 

Official  dignity  of,  Chronicles, 

161-168. 
Personal    history    of,   Chroni- 
cles, 142-160. 
proposes  to  build  a  temple,  II, 

Samuel,  97-108. 
Rebellion  of  Adonijah,  I.  Kings, 

81-93. 
rebuked  by  Nathan,  II.  Samuel, 

169-180. 
reigns  at  Hebron,  11.  Samuel, 

14-25. 


DAVID,  Repentance  of,  II.  Samuel, 
181-192. 

returns  to  Jerusalem,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 289-300. 

Review  of  the  life  of,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 395-400. 

Samuelanoints, I.  Samuel,  253- 

264. 

Saul  jealous  of,  I.  Samuel,  292- 

299- 

Saul's  efforts  against,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 305-316. 

second  flight  to  Gath,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 391-403- 

Song  of  Thanksgiving,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 350-362. 

spares  the  life  of  Saul,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 366-377. 

The  Kingdom  established,  II. 

Samuel,  73-84, 

takes    Jerusalem,    II.   Samuel, 

69. 

Tomb  opened.  Acts  I.,  125. 

Tribe  and  dynasty.  Chronicles, 

133-141- 

typifying    Christ,    I.    Samuel, 

261,  426;  II.  Samuel,  65,  349. 

wars  with  the  Philistines,   II. 

Samuel,  79-83. 

Wives  of,  II.  Samuel,  39. 

DAVIDSON,  A.  B.,  quoted,  Job, 
II,  96,  311,  T^T^y,  Isaiah  II., 
15,  17,  121,  206,  239,  299, 
317,  342;  Jeremiah  II.,  84; 
Ezekiel,  109,  117,  184,  191, 
194,  276,  366,  389,  410,412, 
476;  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  no, 
in;  IL,  2j,  41,  43,  44,  45, 
59,  84,  117,  123,  124,  145, 
152,  154,  318,  380,  2>^2,  393, 
421,432. 


DA  VIDSON— DECALOGUE 


107 


DAVIDSON.  A.  B..  on  Moses, 
Deuteronomy,  483. 

on     sacrifices,      Deuteronomy, 

245- 

DAVIDSON,  Samuel,  quoted.  Job, 
6;  Daniel,  35;  Ephesians,  4; 
James,  45,  55,  112. 

DAVIES,  T.  LI.,  Pastoral  Epistles, 
301. 

DAY  OF  ATONEMENT,  Leviticus, 
256-263,  463;  Numbers,  356; 
I.  Kings,   188. 

DEACONS  elected.  Acts  L,  252- 
258. 

originated    in   Apostles  times, 

Acts  I.,  279. 

DEACONESSES,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 155,  158. 

DEAD,  The,  in  Christ,  Thessa- 
lonians,  169-184. 

Prayers  for.  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 325-330. 

DEAD  SEA  region,  Joshua,  297. 

DEATH  as  a  penalty,  Leviticus, 
420. 

Conception  of.  Numbers,  3. 

the  curse  of  Sin,  Genesis,  28. 

Darkness    typical  of,   Exodus, 

163. 

Defilement,  Numbers,  53,  220. 

desired,  Numbers,  128. 

Faith  and.  Psalms  I.,  147. 

Finality  of.  Job,  187. 

Hebrew  recoil  from.  Numbers, 

4- 

in  the  plans  of  God,  Joshua, 

45. 

Influence  of  a  mother's.  Gene- 
sis, 319. 

influences  life.  Genesis,  226. 

Knowledge  of,   John   Epistles, 

150-152. 


DEATH,  Nearness  to,Genesis,  418. 

not  the  end,  Ecclesiastes,  2^. 

not  terrible.  Proverbs,  41, 

not  to  be  escaped,  Ecclesiastes, 

273. 

of  Christ,  John  I.,  326. 

of  the  righteous.  Numbers,  296. 

promotes  life,  Joshua,  44. 

the  punishment  of  sin.  Genesis, 

25- 

Ready  for,  Philippians,  68. 

a  spiritual  conception,  He- 
brews, 43. 

tests  faith.  Numbers,  ^T,y. 

to  life,  Ephesians,  95-108. 

The  wages  of  sin,  Joshua,  261. 

DEATH  OF  THE  FIRSTBORN, 
Plague  of  the.  Exodus,  167- 
170,  193-195- 

DEBORAH  the  prophetess, 
Judges,  91-105. 

Faith  of,  Hebrews,  261. 

Judgeship  of.  Judges,  135. 

not  unmerciful.  Judges,  117. 

Songof,  Numbers,  383;  Judges, 

106-134. 

DEBORAH,  nurse  of  Rebekah,  dies, 
Genesis,  316. 

DE  BROGLIE,  Emilio,  LEglise  et 
V Empire,  Acts  II.,  273. 

DEBT  among  the  Hebrews,  Leviti- 
cus, 496-498;  Deuteronomy, 
415-417- 

DECALOGUE,  The,  First  com- 
mandment. Exodus,  289-294. 

Second  commandment,  Exo- 
dus, 295-302. 

Third  commandment.  Exodus, 

302-305. 

Fourth  commandment,  Exo- 
dus, 305-312. 


108 


DECALOGUE— DEMON  POSSESSION 


DECALOGUE,  Fifth  command 
ment,  Exodus,  312-314. 

Sixth  commandment,  Exodus, 

315-319- 

Seventh  commandment,  Exo- 
dus, 319-321. 

- — Eighth  commandment,  Exo- 
dus, 321-324. 

Ninth  commandment,  Exodus, 

324-328. 

Tenth  commandment,  Exodus, 

328-330. 

its    substance,    Deuteronomy, 

73-105. 

a   moral   code,  Deuteronomy, 

75- 
Negative  form  of  the,  Deuter- 
onomy, 98. 
Prologue  to  the,  Exodus,  2'&6- 

289. 
Structure  of  the,  Exodus,  284; 

Deuteronomy,  60-72. 
DECISION,  Lack  of,  Luke,  167. 

a  necessity,  I.  Corinthians,  219. 

DECREES  OF  GOD  wrongly  used, 

Exodus,  80. 
DEFOE,  Daniel,  Proverbs,  267. 
DE    GUERIN,    Maurice,     Ecclesi- 

astes,  321. 
DEISM  and  positivism,  Job,  365. 
DELAYED     EXPECTATION      of 

Abraham,  Genesis,  136,  137. 

of  Christianity,  Acts  I.,  62. 

of  Israel,  Luke,  17. 

of  Job,  Job,  269. 

DELILAH    and  Samson,  Judges, 

313  sq. 
DELITZSCH,    F.,    Psalms    I.,    6, 

loi,  210,  274,  296,  314,  368; 

II.,   21,   59,   75,   79,   ^?>,   184, 

202,  203,  213,  224,  271,  276, 


279-  309.  340,  345.  353,  360, 
363,  ?i7^^  381,  39S,  405,406, 
409,  416,  421,  423,  435,474, 
482,  484,  485,  495,  496,  500; 
III.,  24,  27,42,66,  71,  72,,  74. 
90,  104,  132,  133,  148,  167, 
175,  191,  194,  201,  206,  208, 
233,  278,  290,  295,  311,  319, 
347,  349,  357,  367,  l^^,  39i, 
399,  401,  402,  407,  409,  421, 
427,  441,  453;  Proverbs,  99, 
346;  Ecclesiastes,  8,  13,  20,  52, 
90;  IsaiahL,  I47;II.,  121, 163, 
211,  270,  299,  417,435,464; 
Ezekiel,  194;  Daniel,  17, 18,47, 
60,  129,  133,  177;  Twelve 
Prophets  II.,  39,  154,  452; 
John  II.,  176;  Romans,  262. 

Hebrews,  114. 

and    the   day    of   Atonement, 

Numbers,  357. 

DELIVERING  TO  SATAN,  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  74. 

DELUGE,  Genesis,  55-67. 

Chaldean  account  of  the,  Gene- 

esisy  63. 

Extent  of  the,  Genesis,  55. 

Moral   aspects  of.  Genesis,  57. 

New    Testament    use    of  the. 

Genesis,  64. 

Purpose  of,  Genesis,  ^2. 

A   type  of  baptism,   Pastoral 

Epistles,  289. 

DE  LYRA,  Nicholas,  Hebrews,  25S. 

DEMAS,  Luke  and,  Colossians, 
398-401;  Pastoral  Epistles, 
409,  410. 

DEMETRIUS,  Acts  II.,  350,  369, 
2iT2-nS\  John  Epistles,  i<^2, 
303. 

DEMON  POSSESSION,  Luke,  153- 
156. 


DEMONS— DEUTERONOMY  IX. 


109 


DEMONS,  Faith  of,  James,  149, 
156. 

DEMOSTHENES,  Daniel,  %2. 

DENUNCIATION,  James,  181. 

easy,  II.  Corinthians,  69. 

Oriental,  Isaiah  II.,  416. 

DEPENDENCE,  Ignoble,  Judges, 
297. 

DEPRECIATION,  There  must  be 
no,  I.  Corinthians,  289. 

DERBE,  Acts  II.,  200,  216,  260. 

DERENBERG  AND  SAGLIO,  Dic- 
tiotiaire  des  Antiq.,  Acts  II.- 
361. 

DESCARTES,  Rene,  Proverbs,  16. 

DESERTION  of  Christ,  John  I., 
235- 

DESPAIR,  Faith  born  of,  II.  Cor- 
inthians, 23-34. 

DESPONDENCY,  How  God  deals 
with,  I.  Kings,  424-430. 

of  Elijah,  I.  Kings,  415-423. 

DESTRUCTION  not  progress, 
Judges,   156. 

DETERMINISM,  James,  93,  95. 

DEUTERONOMY,  Jeremiah  I.,  18- 
23;  Ezekiel,  6. 

Authorship  and  age  of,  Deuter- 
onomy, 1-36. 

found    by   Hilkiah,   II.   Kings, 

399-401. 

Historic  setting  of,  Deuter- 
onomy, 37-47. 

DEUTERONOMY  I.,  17,  Ezekiel, 
440. 

27,  Psalms  III.,  146. 

44,  Psalms  III.,  236. 

DEUTERONOMY  II.,  5,  8,  12, 
Twelve  Prophets  II.,  170. 

25,  I.  Samuel,  102, 

DEUTERONOMY  III.,  2t„  Peter, 
218. 


DEUTERONOMY  IV.,  3,  Jeremiah 

I.,  200. 

7,  Psalms  II,,  361. 

18,  Jeremiah  I.,  200. 

19,  II.   Kings,   361;  Jeremiah 

I.,  240. 
20,    Exodus,    144;   Ephesians, 

50. 

24,  II.  Kings,  18. 

25,  Jeremiah  I.,  17. 

26,  Jeremiah  I.,  85. 

34,  Psalms  III.,  368. 

40,  Psalms  III.,  421. 

DEUTERONOMY  v.,  i.  Psalms  II., 

420. 

1 1,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  7,T^y. 

12,  Jeremiah  I.,  7^y2. 

15,  Leviticus,  455. 

22,  Galatians,  218. 

27,  28,  Hebrews,  304. 

DEUTERONOMY  VI.,  3,  Jeremiah 

I.,  165. 
4,  Psalms  II.,  467;  Galatians, 

220. 
5,   Psalms  II.,  466;  Jeremiah 

n.,  334. 

25,  Luke,  335. 

DEUTERONOMY  VII.,    2,    Num- 
bers, 137,  182. 
3,      Chronicles,      yy\       Ezra, 

138. 
9,     Ezra,     178;     Psalms    III., 

108. 

r6,  Jeremiah  I.,  y^. 

25,  Isaiah  I.,  420. 

DEUTERONOMY  IX.,  6,  Jeremiah 

II.,  291. 

7,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  248. 

16,  19,  Hebrews,  300. 

25,  Psalms  III.,  146. 

2"],  Daniel,  97. 


110      DEUTERONOMY  X.—DEUTERONOMY  XXV. 


DEUTERONOMY     X.,     12,      13, 

DEUTERONOMY  XVIII.,  3,  Eze- 

James, 22^2. 

kiel,  442. 

17,  Psalms  III.,  2i^y. 

4,  Matthew,  74. 

20,  Jeremiah  I.,  132. 

10,  Daniel,  81,  146. 

21,  Jeremiah  I.,  359. 

12,  Jeremiah  I.,  23. 

22,  Acts  I.,  310. 

15-19,  Matthew,  296. 

DEUTERONOMY   XL,  6,  Psalms 

18,  Chronicles,  269. 

III.,  145. 

21,  Jeremiah  I.,  359. 

12,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  402. 

21,    22,  Twelve  Prophets  IL, 

14,  James,  293. 

536. 

24,  Psalms  II.,  411. 

DEUTERONOMY XIX.,  15,11.  Cor- 

DEUTERONOMY XII.,  11,  Twelve 

inthians,  2>7:s- 

Prophets,  336. 

DEUTERONOMY  XX.,   5-7,  Ezra, 

13,  14,  I.  Kings,  121. 

331. 

15,   16,  20-24,  Leviticus,  369. 

13,  IL  Kings,  yz- 

44,  Psalms  I.,  368. 

19,  20,  II.  Kings,  34. 

DEUTERONOMY  XIIL,  i.  Twelve 

DEUTERONOMY  XXL,  13,  Ezra, 

Prophets  I.,  17. 

137- 

1-3,  Exodus,  352. 

14,  Peter,  135. 

1-5,  Jeremiah  II.,  340. 

17,  IL  Kings,  21. 

5j  9.  i5j  Chronicles,  352. 

22,.,  Galatians,  194. 

7,  Isaiah  I.,  420. 

DEUTERONOMY   XXIL,    10,    IL 

DEUTERONOMY  XIV.,     i,    Jere- 

Corinthians, 240. 

miah  I.,  335. 

22,  Leviticus,  550. 

28,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  160. 

2T^,  24,  Leviticus,  404,  405. 

DEUTERONOMY  XV.,   i-ii,    Le- 

DEUTERONOMY XXIIL,  i,  Gala- 
tians, 328. 
1-8,  Ezra,  137. 

viticus,  489;  Ezra,  254,  257. 

6,  28,  Psalms  I.,  368. 

7,  8,  Ezra,  258. 

2,  Twelve  Prophets  IL,  153. 

22,  Leviticus,  540. 

10,  Jeremiah  I.,  23. 

DEUTERONOMY  XXIV.,   i,  Mat- 

 12,  Jeremiah  II.,  146,  347. 

thew,  268. 

16,  17,  Romans,  176. 

1-4,  Jeremiah  I.,  107, 

21,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  T^^i"?- 

14,  James,  280. 

DEUTERONOMY  XVL,  9,  Ezekiel, 

16,    IL    Kings,    168;    Ezekiel, 

468. 

146. 

DEUTERONOMY     XVIL,    3,    IL 

DEUTERONOMY   XXV.,   i,  John 

Kings,  361. 

Epistles,  183. 

14-20,  I.  Kings,  242. 

4,  Twelve  Prophets  L,  288. 

16,  II.  Samuel,  217;  I.Kings, 

5-10,  Leviticus,  381,  384. 

148;  Chronicles,  171. 

13,  Leviticus,  414. 

20,  Jeremiah  L,  105. 

17,  18,  Joshua,  25. 

DEUTERONOMY  XXVI.— DE   WETTE 


111 


DEUTERONOMY     XXVI.,     5,    I. 

DEUTERONOMY  XXXII.,  8,  Jere- 

Kings, 52;  II.  Kings,  246. 

miah  I.,  126. 

DEUTERONOMY    XXVII.,    4,    «, 

9,  Jeremiah  I.,  240. 

Joshua,  207. 

10-12,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  228. 

4-19,  Joshua,  203. 

II,  12,  Revelation,  211. 

6,  James,  67. 

15,  Jeremiah  I.,  91;  Jeremiah 

26,  Galatians,  188. 

II.,   22,9,. 

DEUTERONOMY  XXVIIL,  1-8,  II. 

16,  Jeremiah  I.,  162. 

Kings,  405. 

17,   Psalms  III.,   150;  James, 

3-5,  Ephesians,  24. 

153- 

6,  I.  Kings,  125. 

21,  Romans,  280. 

15,    Jeremiah    I.,    200;    Gala- 

 22,  Psalms  II.,  465. 

tians,  188. 

24,  Psalms  III.,  21. 

21-26,  Jeremiah  I.,  314. 

30,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  179. 

25,  Jeremiah  I.,  2^,  169. 

31,  I.  Corinthians,  137. 

30,  Jeremiah  I.,    179;  Twelve 

35,  Romans,  342. 

Prophets  II.,  39. 

2,6,  Psalms  III.,  364;  Jeremiah 

34,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  24. 

II.,  32;  Hebrews,  192. 

36,  Jeremiah  I.,  201. 

39,  Jeremiah  I.,  187. 

44,  Jeremiah  I,,  295. 

49,  Ezekiel,  374. 

52-58,  II.  Kings,  78. 

DEUTERONOMY,      XXXIIL,      2, 

64,   Psalms  III.,  147;  Ezekiel, 

Twelve  Prophets  II.,  151;  Gala- 

178. 

tians,  217;  Hebrews,  301. 

DEUTERONOMY  XXIX.,  17,  Jere- 

 8-1 1,  Joshua,  348. 

miah  I.,  201. 

18,    19,    Twelve   Prophets   I., 

18,  Hebrews,  287. 

271. 

19,  Jeremiah  I.,  121. 

26,  Peter,  265. 

22,  Romans,  289. 

2y,    Psalms    III.,    6;    Twelve 

29.  Romans,  276. 

Prophets,  270. 

DEUTERONOMY  XXX.,  6,  Colos- 

29,  Peter,  218. 

sians,  200. 

DEUTERONOMY  XXXIV.,  9,  Acts 

12-14,  Romans,  268. 

I.,  284. 

DEUTERONOMY       XXXI.,       14, 

10,  Exodus,  100. 

Joshua,  35. 

DEUTERONOMY  XXXVI.,  i,  Dan- 

 23,  Joshua,  35. 

iel,  180. 

26,  Exodus,  T^yj. 

DEUTSCH,  EMMANUEL,  Ecclesi- 

DEUTERONOMY  XXXII.,  Psalms 

astes,  280,  281. 

I.,  156. 

DE  VOGUE,  Le  Temple  de  Jerusa- 

 2,  Psalms  II.,  282,  424. 

lem,  Acts  I.,  158,  165. 

. 4,   Psalms  III.,   32;  Jeremiah 

DE  WETTE,  W.  M.  L.,  II.  Corin- 

I.,  79. 

thians,  1655  James,  Z7^. 

112 


DIANA— DISTRUST 


DIANA,  Acts  II.,  331,  360,  362, 
376;  Ephesians,  133;  Pastoral 
Epistles,  84,  198, 

DIDACHE,  See  Teaching  of  the 
Twelve  Apostles. 

DIDRON,  M.,  Isaiah  I.,  186,  187, 
326. 

DIDYMUS  OF  ALEXANDRIA, 
James,  369,  422. 

DIES  IRAE,  Song  of  Solomon, 
263;  John  Epistles,  219. 

DILIGENCE,  Proverbs,  139,  262 
sq. ;  Pastoral  Epistles,  368- 
370;  Peter,  246. 

DILLMANN,  August,  quoted, 
Isaiah  XL,  338,  349,  387,  392, 
435,  436,  457,  459;  Daniel, 
JT,  James,  438,  440. 

on  ancient  Hebrew  culture,  Le- 
viticus, 390. 

on  blessing  and  curse,  Deuter- 
onomy, 231. 

on    the    Day    of    Atonement, 

Leviticus,  258. 

on  the  law  of  the  Jubilee,  Levit- 
icus, 491. 

on  Tithes,  Leviticus, 

DIOGENES  LAERTIUS, 
Epistles,  296. 

DIOGNETUS,  James,  4. 

DION    CASSIUS,    Acts 
204. 

DION  CHRYSOSTOM,  Acts  II., 
276,  ?,77- 

DIONYSIUS,  the  Areopagite,  Acts 
IL,  317,  318,  320. 

DISCIPLES,  The  twelve.  Call  of 
the  first,  Matthew,  52-56; 
Mark,  17-20;  Luke,  162-176; 
John  L,  53-66. 

Characteristics  of,   Mark,    80- 

87. 


560. 
Pastoral 


IL,    163, 


DISCIPLES,     Choice     of,     Mark, 

75-80. 
The      commission,      Matthew, 

137-141- 

Jesus  and,  Mark,  247-254, 

The    mission,    Matthew,     132- 

137;  Mark,  167-170. 
DISCIPLINE,  Acts  II. ,  107. 
Church,    II.    Corinthians,    72- 

^y,    Thessalonians,     205-214, 

375-387- 
Doom  or,  Twelve  Prophets  I., 

181-195- 

Faith  a,  Hebrews,  250-253, 

The  finest.  Numbers,  238. 

necessary  to  the  church,  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  72,  72>- 

of  children   of  God,   Numbers, 

59;  I.  Kings,  412. 

of  conscience,  Hebrews,  175. 

of  humanity,  Numbers,  325. 

DISCONTENT,  The  spirit  of, 
Joshua,  305. 

DISEASES  communicated  to  men 
by  animals,  Leviticus,  291,375, 

Jews  not  subject  to,  Leviticus, 

294. 

DISOBEDIENCE,  Conscientious, 
Pastoral  Epistles,  278. 

DISORDER,  Social,  Numbers,  165, 

DISPERSION,  The,  Matthew,  6; 
James,  50-54;  Peter,  4. 

DISPOSITION,  A  passionate. 
Proverbs,  203-214. 

shown  in  choice  of  occupation, 

Genesis,  30. 

DISTRIBUTION,  Economic,  Prov- 
erbs, 136. 

The  law  of,  Joshua,  2yc)-2?>2. 

DISTRUST  of  David,  I.  Samuel, 
395. 


D 1 1  'IN A  TION—D  O I  'E 


113 


DIVINATION  forbidden,  Leviti- 
cus. 40S;  Nimibers,  JO3;  Deut- 
eronomy. 3J5. 

DIVINL-:  C.OVKKNMKNr,  Num 
bers,  1S7;  Deuteronomy,  48- 
59;  I.  Samuel,  29. 

DIVINE  GUIDANCE,  Numbers, 
268;  Joshua,  99. 

DIVINE  REVELATION,  Continu- 
ous, Genesis,  134. 

Method  of.  Genesis,  88. 

Progressive,  Exodus,  55;  Deu- 

tcronom)-.  344. 

Purpose  of  the,  Deuteronomy, 

93- 

uses  mind  as  it  is,  Deuteron- 
omy, 107. 

DIVISION  OF  LAND,  Numbers, 
330. 

DIVORCE,  Pastoral  Epistles,  120. 

Christ  on,  Matthew,  268-270; 

Mark,  263-267. 

CrueltvofjTwelve  Prophets  II., 

363. 

in    the    time    of    Ezra,    Ezra, 

150-151- 

Law  of,  Deuteronomy,  403, 

Tendency  to,  Leviticus,  384. 

DOCETISM,  John  Epistles,  26,  44, 
50-52. 

DOCTRINE  and  ethics,  Ephesians, 
304-320. 

Continuity  of,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 336-340. 

Development    of,    James,   380- 

387- 

the    outgrowth    of  experience, 

Philippians,  367. 

Strange,  Hebrews,  317. 

DOCUMENTARY  THEORY  OF 
THE  PENTATEUCH,  Deuter- 
onomy, 7,  471;  Joshua,  15. 


DODDRIDGE,   Philip,  quoted,  Ec- 

clesiastes,  262. 
DODS,  Dr.  Marcus,  Arts  II.,  360; 

Revelation,  64. 
DOEG,  THE  EDOMITE,   I.  Sam- 
uel, 345353;  Psalms  II.,   144. 
DOGMATISM,  Job,  136. 
DOGS,   David's  enemies  compared 

to.  Psalms  n.,  202. 
DOLLINGER,    Dr.    Johann  J.  L, 

Acts  XL,  145;  Ephesians,  264; 

Pastoral     Epistles,     8,     129; 

James,  30,  31,  153,  273,  328, 

400. 
DOMITIAN,  \   Emperor,      James, 

324;  John  Epistles,  11,    163. 
DONALDSON,        James,        Greek 

Grammar,  John   Epistles,  'jy, 

103,  217,  301. 
DONATELLO,  Proverbs,  183. 
DORCAS,  Acts  II.,  97. 
DORNER,  L  A.,  Ephesians,  Z72', 

James,  116,  390. 
DOTHAN,  Elisha  at,  II.  Kings,  67- 

75- 
DOUAY  VERSION,  James,  295. 
DOUBLE-MINDEDNESS,     James, 

245- 
DOUBT,   Lessons    of.   Psalms   II., 

335- 

of  God's  presence.  Genesis,  70; 

Numbers,  164;  Judges,  206. 

DOUGHTY,  C.  M.,  Aral>ia  Deserta, 
quoted.  Job,  20;  Isaiah  I., 
394;  IL,  190,  241;  Twelve 
Prophets  I.,  126,  134,  179, 
186,  398;  II. ,  179,  399. 

DOULCET,  Louis,  in  Rev. des quest 
History,  Acts  I.,  VIII. 

DOVE,  Sending  forth  of  Noah's, 
Genesif    /i. 


114 


D 0X0 LOG  Y—D  YER 


DOXOLOGY  addressed  to  Christ, 
Pastoral  Epistles,  249. 

of  Jude,  James,  463-470. 

DRAMA  OF  LIFE,  Numbers,  330. 

DREAM  of  Jacob,  Genesis,  282- 
292. 

of  Joseph,  Genesis,  329. 

of  Pharoah,  Genesis,  361. 

of  Pharoah's  servants  inter- 
preted, Genesis,  350. 

once  a  revelation  of  God,  He- 
brews, 10. 

DRESS  of  women.  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 1 01. 

DRIVER,  S.  R.,  Isaiah  II.,  12,  14, 
16,  281,  435,  459;  Jeremiah 
II.,  244,  296,  319,  322;  Eze- 
kiel,  402;  Daniel,  18,  21; 
Twelce  Prophets  II.,  11;,  118, 
128,  167,  380,  422,  432,498, 
506. 

on  authorship  of  Deuter- 
onomy, Deuteronomy,  4. 

on    the  fundamental  truth   of 

Deuteronomy,     Deuteronomy, 

DROUGHT  in  the  time  of  Jere- 
miah, Jeremiah  I.,  300-363. 

DRUMMOND,  Henry,  James,  423; 
John  Epistles,  131. 

DRUNKENNESS,  Proverbs,  y6, 
275,  287;  Isaiah  I.,  44-47j 
152,  153;  Galatians,  372-3;4- 

Effects  of,  Ezra,  364. 

DRUSILLA,  Acts  II.,  431,  447. 


DUALISM,  Job,  166. 

DUHM,  Bernhard,  quoted,  Isaiah 
II.,  216;  Ezekiel,  41;  Twelve 
Prophets  I.,  135,  202,  366; 
II.,  380,  451. 

on  Deuteronomy  and  proph- 
esy, Deuteronomy,  249. 

DUHR,  J.,  Journey^ s  of  Hadrian, 
Acts  II.,  306. 

DUUMVIRI,  Acts  II.,  275. 

DUTY,  Deuteronomy,  141,  143; 
Judges,  300,  415;  Job,  88; 
Ecclesiastes,  254,  309;  Twelve 
Prophets    II.,    522;   Matthew, 

85-95. 

and  example,    Romans,    389- 

392. 

and  the  Incarnation,  John  I., 

14-17. 

and  the  Lord's  presence,  Ro- 
mans, 369-373,. 

and  the  second  advent,  Ro- 
mans, 361-373. 

and    tolerance,   Romans,   374- 

388. 

Civil,   Romans,  348-352. 

The  Lord's  example  and,  Ro- 
mans, 393-402. 

Love  and,  Romans,  359-360. 

Personal  conduct  and,  Ro- 
mans, 336-347- 

The  state,  Romans,  353-35S. 

DWELLING  HOUSES,  The  Jubi- 
lee and,  Leviticus,  494-496. 

DYER,  Sir  Edward,  Proverbs,  356. 


EA  KNES  TNESS—ED  OM 


115 


EARNESTNESS,    I.    Corinthians, 

22  1 ;  Hebrews,  loo. 
EARTHQUAKE,    Isaiah    I.,    50; 

Twelve  Prophets  I.,  182. 
EATING,  The  figure  of,  John  I., 

219. 
HoHness    in,    Leviticus,    367- 

EBAL  and  Gerizim,  Joshua,  201- 

210. 
EBED  MELECH,  the  Ethiopian, 

Jeremiah  II.,  165. 
EBENEZER  of  Samuel,  I.  Samuel, 

103. 
EBIONISM,  Acts  I.,    120;  II.,  6; 

James,  ^t^. 
ECCLESIASTES,       The       book. 

Authorship,  Ecclesiastes,  7. 

Date  of,  Ecclesiastes,  8-19. 

Design  of,  Eccllsiastes,  27. 

Form  of,  Ecclesiastes,  20-27. 

Translated,    Ecclesiastes,    69- 

IIO. 

ECCLESIASTES  I.,  6,  8,  Prov- 
erbs, 22. 

ECCLESIASTES  II.,  4-6,  I.  Kings, 
225. 

8,  I.  Kings,  131. 

ECCLESIASTES  V.,  5,  6,  Leviti- 
cus, 550. 

ECCLESIASTES  VUL,  17,  Jere- 
miah I.,  209. 

ECCLESIASTES  IX.,  5,  6,  Job, 
188. 

7,  Proverbs,  61. 

ECCLESIASTES  X.,  6,  Psalms  III., 
369. 


ECCLESIASTES  XII.,  14,  Joshua, 

176;  Peter,  358. 
ECCLESIASTICUS,  Proverbs,  9, 
12,  22,  81,  139,  144,  169, 
184,  218,  250,  2>^(>,  400;  Jere- 
miah I.,  93,  95,  313;  IL,  369; 
Daniel,  12,  202;  James,  68-74, 
109,  281;  Peter,  348,  350. 

ECKHEL,  Josephus,  On  coins,  Acts 
II.,  163. 

ECONOMIC  ASPECTS  OF  IS- 
RAELITE LIFE,  Deuter- 
onomy, 355-376. 

ECSTASY,  Pastoral  Epistles, 
241 ;  Hebrews,  11,  53. 

EDINBURG  REVIEW,  James,  yy. 

EDOM,  Isaiah  I.,  94,  276,  438, 
440. 

ally  of  Israel,  II.  Kings,  31. 

Amaziah   and,  II.  Kings,   170. 

Amos  and.  Twelve  Prophets  I., 

128-131. 

and  Ezekiel,  Ezekiel,  227,  228, 

2>27,  2,12. 

and    Israel,    Chronicles,      50; 

Psalms  II. ,  209;  Twelve  Proph- 
ets, II.,  177-184. 

and    Jeremiah,    Jeremiah     II., 

243-247. 

becomes  free,  II.  Kings,  i02. 

David  wars  against,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 116, 

Doom    of,    Song    of  Solomon, 

301-304. 

Israel  debarred  from.  Num- 
bers, 231. 


116 


EDOM—ELI 


EDOM,      Malachi      and,      Twelve 

Prophets  11. ,  34935 2. 
Obadiah  and,  Twelve  Prophets 

II.,  164  sq. 
EDEN,    The   garden    of,    Genesis, 

15-27. 
EDERSHEIM,    A.,    Matthew,    17, 

389;  Acts  II.,  14. 
EDUCATION,  Judges,  273;  Prov- 
erbs, 52-64,  303-313. 
during   the  captivity,   Ecclesi. 

astes,  283. 

for  life  work,  Chronicles,  216. 

Gratitude  to  teachers,  Ecclesi- 

astes,  301. 

Moral,  slow,  Judges,  61. 

Mosaic  view  of,  Deuteronomy, 

146-167. 

of  the  wilderness.  Numbers,  256. 

prevents  lapse,   Deuteronomy, 

163. 
EDWARDS,     Jonathan,     quoted. 

Job,  2y2i- 
EGNATIAN  ROAD,  Acts  II.,  271. 
EGYPT,  Isaiah  I.,  92,  96,  197  sq., 

222-275. 

Abraham  in.  Genesis,  96-107. 

Administration      of     Joseph, 

Genesis,  369-382. 

and  Ezekiel,  Ezekiel,  262-283. 

and  her  aliens.  Exodus,  17. 

and  Hezekiah,  II.  Kings,  298. 

and    Jeremiah,    Jeremiah    II., 

220-229. 
Assyria    and,   II.   Kings,    251, 

276,  298. 
defeated    at    Carchemish,     II. 

Kings,  423. 
Israel  in,  Genesis,   t^z},  sq.  383 

sq. ;  Exodus,  2. 
Israel  under  supernatural    di- 
rection, Joshua,  7. 


EGYPT,  Jeremiah  goes  to,  Jere- 
miah II.,  187-196. 

Joseph  in.  Genesis,  341  sq. 

Religion     of,       Deuteronomy, 

130-132. 

Shepherd  king  of,  Genesis,  99. 

Temples  of.  Chronicles,  109. 

Trust  in,  Jeremiah  I.,  74-113; 

Ezekiel,  102-106. 

Worship  of.  Exodus,  123;  Num- 
bers, 43. 

EHUD,  Judges,  76-87. 

EKRON,  Isaiah  I.,  308. 

The  ark  at,  I.  Samuel,  yd. 

ELAH,   king  of  Israel,   I.    Kings, 

311,  2>l^- 

ELAM,  Genesis,  122  sq. ;  Jeremiah 
II.,  255,  257. 

ELDADandMedad,  Numbers,  130. 

ELDERS  (or  Presbyters),  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  67,  112,  n8, 
165,    213,    217;    James,   2,2^ 

Four  and  twenty.  Revelation, 

69. 

ELDERS,  Seventy,  chosen.  Num- 
bers, 128. 

critics  of  Moses,  Numbers,  200. 

ELEAZAR  and  Ithamar,  Num- 
bers, 31. 

Death  of,  Joshua,  400,  401. 

Faith  of,  Hebrews,  264. 

installed  as  high-priest.  Num- 
bers, 241. 

ELECTION,  Ephesians,  28;  Peter, 

7- 

signs  of,  Thessalonians,  37  52. 

Work  of  the  trinity  in,   Peter, 

3-16. 
ELI,    Laxity   of,    I,    Samuel,    37> 

41-45. 


EI  T-EUJCOTl^                                        117 

LLI.,    Message   to,  I.  SainiKl,  45- 

KLIMKI.ECH    goes    to    Moab,   I. 

48,  56. 

Samuel,  366-367. 

Samuel  bioughl  tn,  I.  Sainiul, 

ELIOT,  (leorge,  John  Epistles,  45, 

22-24. 

46. 

Wickedness  of  the  sons   of,   I. 

ELIPHAZ  apparently  right.  Job, 

Samuel,  39-41- 

113- 

I.I.IAB  rebukes  David,  I.  Samuel, 

Character  of.  Job,  102. 

2?.  2. 

First  speech  of.  Job,  99-116. 

r.I.IAKIM,  Isaiah  I.,  317;  K/^ekiel, 

his  religion.  Job,  114. 

107. 

his  second  speech.  Job,  187. 

ELIASHIB,  the  high  priest,  Ezra, 

his  third  speech,  Job,  269. 

218. 

jealous  for  God,  Job,  191. 

ELIHU  and  Job,  Job,  341-377- 

a  pure  Temanite,  Job,  189. 

ELIJAH  and  Ahab,  I.  Kings,  ny- 

Vision  of.  Job,  106. 

382. 

ELISHA    and    the    ascension    of 

and  Ahaziah,  II.  Kings,  10-18. 

Elijah,  II.  Kings,  19-24. 

and       Jereboam,      Chronicles, 

and   Hazael,  II.  Kings,  90-98. 

396. 

and  John,  II.  Kings,  110-112. 

and  the  rain,   I.    Kings,    399- 

and  Naaman,  II.  Kings,  49-65. 

403- 

and  the  siege  of  Samaria,   H. 

and      Solomon    compared,     I. 

Kings,  76-86. 

Kings,  497-499. 

and    the    Syrians,    II.    Kings, 

appears,  I.  Kings,  357-37^- 

66-75. 

Ascension  of,  II.  Kings,  19-28. 

The  call  of,  I.  Kings,  445-450. 

at  Sarepta,  I.  Kings,  372376. 

compared     with      Elijah,     II. 

at    the    transfiguration,    Mat- 

Kings,  41. 

thew,  238,  243;  Mark,  2^7. 

Death  of,  II.  Kings,  179. 

defiled   by  touching  the  dead, 

Miracles  of,  II.  Kings,  40-49. 

Hebrews,  155. 

Stories  of,  II.  Kings,  25-28. 

Despair  of,  I.  Kings,  415-423. 

ELIZABETH,  mother  of  John  the 

I'll -111  of,  I.   King:i,  404-414- 

Baptist,  Luke,  34-39. 

his  failh.  Hebrews,  263. 

ELIZABETH,  Queen,  Last  days  of, 

Legend  of,  Ecclesiastcs.  315. 

II.  Samuel,  308. 

on  Mt.  Carmel,  I.  Kings,  383- 

ELKANAH,  I.  Samuel,  3. 

39«. 

offering  at   Shiloh,   I.  Samuil, 

Prayers  of,  James,  344. 

21. 

Removal  of,  Hebrews,  220. 

ELKOSH,  Twelve  Prophets  IL.  yH- 

Return    of.    Twelve    Prophets, 

80. 

371- 

ELLICOTT,C.  J.,  Galatians,  229; 

— sudden  appearances,  Hebrews, 

Ephesians,  42;  Thessalonians, 

0. 

43-   117- 

118 


ELYMAS—EPHESIANS  II. 


ELYMAS,  Acts  II.,  203;  Pastoral 
Epistles,  yi. 

EMANATIONS,  Doctrine  of,  He- 
brews, 21  sq. 

EMANIA,  Acts  I.,  no. 

EMBER  SEASONS,  Acts  II.,  194. 

EMERSON,  Ralph  Waldo,  quoted, 
Job,  257;  Proverbs,  146. 

EMIGRATION,  causes  of,  Judges, 
366. 

EMMAUS,  The  walk  to,  Luke, 
405;  I.  Corinthians,  349. 

EMOTION  in  religion,  Pastoral 
Epistles,  244-247;  John  Epis- 
tles, 194. 

EMPLOYER  and  employee, 
Judges,  390. 

ENCOURAGEMENT,  Romans, 
29;  Thessalonians,  210-21 1. 

of  Nehemiah,  Ezra,  244. 

END  DOES  NOT  JUSTIFY 
MEANS,  Genesis,  273;  Judges, 
104;  I.  Kings,  294. 

ENDEAVOR,    Law    of.    Numbers, 

324- 
ENDOR,  Joshua,  303. 

Saul  at,  I.  Samuel,  404-415. 

Witch  of,  I.  Samuel,  409. 

ENDURANCE,  Exodus,  227. 
ENERGY  in  disaster.  Exodus,  39. 
ENGEDI,    Genesis,    124;    Ezekiel, 

488. 

David  at,  I.  Samuel,  354,  369. 

ENJOYMENT,  Job,  54. 
ENMITY,    Hard    to  escape  from, 

Judges,  71. 
ENOCH,    Genesis,   51-54;   Psalms 

II.,  loi,  346. 

Faith  of,  Hebrews,  219,  220. 

ENTHUSIASM  not  to  be  quenched, 

Thessalonians,  235-238. 


ENTHUSIASM,    of    Ezra,     Ezra, 

114,  115. 

of  faith,  Numbers,  303. 

of  humanity,  James,  231. 

of  the  Israelites,  Numbers,  353^ 

Power    of,    Acts    II.,    269;    I. 

Corinthians,  no. 
EPAPHRAS,  Acts  II.,  350;  Colos- 

sians,  21,  35-37,  394-397- 
EPAPHRODITUS,        Philippians, 

157-170. 
EPHESIAN  LETTERS,  Acts  II., 

355. 

EPHESIANS,  The  Epistle,  He- 
brews, 52. 

and  Colossians,  Colossians,  i. 

conclusion,      Ephesians,     425- 

440. 

Introduction,  Ephesians,  3-18. 

EPHESIANS  L,  i.  Acts  II.,  60. 

3,  Revelation,  370. 

3-6,  Peter,  vii.,  18. 

4-6,  Galatians,  151. 

5-9,  Galatians,  149. 

6,  Luke,  56. 

7,    Leviticus,   34;    Colossians, 

64;  James,  115. 

9,      Pastoral     Epistles,     132; 

Peter,  135. 

14,  Galatians,  172. 

15,  Galatians,  229;  Colossi- 
ans, 434. 

1 8,  John  Epistles,  218. 

19,  II.  Corinthians,  26. 

21,  Peter,  145,  301. 

22,  Revelation,  2. 

EPHESIANS  IL,  2,  Colossians, 
209;    Peter,   299;   Revelation, 

273. 

5,  8,  Romans,  229. 

7,  Galatians,  tj,  152. 


EPHESTANS  IL—EPHESUS 


119 


EPHESIANS  II.,  8,  Galatians, 
151 ;  Revelation,   t^zz. 

10,  II.  Corinthians,  206;  Peter, 

129;  John  Epistles,  125;  He- 
brews, 268;  Revelation,  83. 

11-13,    II.    Corinthians,    198; 

Galatians,  iT^y. 

12,  Chronicles,  199;  Peter,  y  t^. 

13,  Peter,  191. 

15,  Galatians,  239. 

20,  James,  456. 

21,  Pastoral  Epistles,  392. 

22,  Exodus,  375;  Romans,  234; 

James,  455. 

EPHESIANS  III.,  Ill,  Galatians, 

74- 
2,  8,   Romans,  18;  Galatians, 

121. 

3,  9,  Pastoral  Epistles,  132. 

4-6,  Galatians,  2^,^. 

7,  8,  Galatians,  152. 

8,  Romans,  298. 

15,    Exodus,    313;    Leviticus, 

385. 

16,  Romans,  200,  214. 

17,  Romans,  371. 

19,  Romans,  15. 

EPHESIANS IV.,  i,Colossians,43. 
2,      Pastoral     Epistles,    394; 

Peter,  366. 

3,  Peter,  123. 

4-6,  Galatians,  125. 

8,  Acts  I.,  411;  Peter,  74. 

9,  10,  Galatians,  250. 

II,    Romans,    411;    Pastoral 

Epistles,  66,  115. 

13,  Galatians,  239. 

— ' — 14,  Galatians,  309. 

15,  James,  256. 

17,  Peter,  49. 

19,  Leviticus,  340. 


EPHESIANS  IV.,  25,   Psalms    L, 

in. 

2?>,  Exodus,  324. 

2i2^  Peter,  120. 

EPHESIANS  v.,    I,  2,  Galatians, 

354. 

2,  Leviticus,  34. 

5,  Galatians,  355. 

6,     Philippians,     132;     Colos- 

sians,  279. 

9,  Galatians,  185. 

II,  Daniel,  102. 

13,  Romans,  346. 

14,      II.      Corinthians,      246; 

James,  2t^t^. 

15,  Romans,  324. 

18,  Exodus,  293. 

19,  James,  319,  321, 

22,  23,  Song  of  Solomon,   45. 

25-27,  Revelation,  370. 

26,  Pastoral  Epistles,  285,  286; 

Hebrews,  187. 

2y,  Colossians,  loi. 

29-32,  Leviticus,  385. 

32,  Mark,  62^',  Revelation,  321. 

EPHESIANS  VI.,  2,  Exodus,  306. 

5,  Peter,  96. 

9,  Galatians,  114. 

10,  Pastoral  Epistles,  424. 

II,  James,  249. 

12,    Pastoral    Epistles,    343; 

Revelation,  225. 

13,  Romans,  ^^-^2. 

15,  Thessalonians,  225. 

16,  Peter,  58. 

18,  James,  455;  Peter,  129, 

19,  Pastoral  Epistles,  132. 

21,  Pastoral  Epistles,  411. 

24,  Galatians,  172. 

EPHESUS,    Church    of,    Acts  IL, 

331-356;    Revelation,   2>2>,  44, 

46. 


120 


EPHES  US—E  TIIIOPIA  N  E  UNUCH 


EPHESUS,  Council  of,  Acts  II., 
258. 

in  the  time  of  John,  John  Epis- 
tles, 13-15. 

John  at,  John  Epistles,  10,  ii. 

Paul  at,  Acts  II.,  331-384. 

Riot  of.  Acts  II.,  357-384. 

Timothy  at,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

25,  84,  198,  265,  320,  2,22,. 

EPHOD,  The,  Leviticus,  194. 

of  Gideon,  Judges,  200,  201. 

EPHRAIM,  The  tribe,  Psalms  II., 
388;  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  271, 
275- 

and  Jephthah,    Judges,     254- 

257. 

blessed  by  Moses,  Deuter- 
onomy, 467. 

EPHRAIM  blessed  by  Jacob,  Exo- 
dus, 421, 

born,  Genesis,   TiT2. 

Inheritance  of  Manassah  and, 

Joshua,  300-311. 

EPHREM  SYRUS,  James,  370; 
Peter,  xiii. 

EPICTETUS,  Ecclesiastes,  3,  4, 
297;  Thessalonians,  392. 

EPICURUS  and  Epicureans,  Dan- 
iel, 139;  James,  265,  283. 

EPIMENIDES,  Acts  II.,  1 1 ;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  224,  225. 

EPIPHANIUS,  Acts  I.,  66;  II.,  6; 
John  Epistles,  52. 

EPISCOPACY,  Pastoral  Epistles, 
107,  112,  114,  221. 

EQUALITY,  Proverbs,  294. 

ERASMUS,  Desiderius,  James, 
222,  351,  353,  418;  P^ter, 
xvii. 

Blunder  of.  Judges,  133. 

ERASTUS,  Pastoral  Epistles,  414, 
415. 


ESARHADDON,    II.,   Kings,   343, 

366;  Chronicles,  446. 

Inscription  of,  II.  Kings,  492. 

ESAU    and    Jacob,    Genesis,   254- 

266. 

hairy.  Genesis,  258. 

Jacob   afraid  of,  Genesis,  295. 

meets    Jacob    on    his    return. 

Genesis,  310. 
Repentance    of,    Genesis,    255- 

Representative       of      worldly 

sport,  Hebrews,  2?,-j, 

sells    his    birthright,    Genesis, 

262. 

ESCHATOLOGY  of  the  Gospel, 
Luke,  352-363- 

Rose  water.  Job,  55. 

ESDRAELON,  Plain  of,  I.  Samuel, 
429. 

ESSENES,  Hebrews,  26,  320  sq.; 
James,  306. 

ESTEEM  of  man  for  man,  Deuter- 
onomy, 421. 

ESTHER,   The  Queen,  Ezra,  382- 

391- 

ESTHER,  The  book,  Ezra,  351- 
360. 

Exposition   of,  Ezra,  361-404. 

ESTHER  VII.,  8,  Mark,  412. 

ETERNITY  in  the  heart,  Ecclesias- 
tes, 183,  190,  216. 

ETHBAAL  I.,  I.  Kings,  349. 

ETHBAAL  II.,  Ezekiel,  252. 

ETHICS,  Doctrine  and,  Ephc- 
sians,  305-320. 

of  the  Gospel,  Luke,  336-351. 

of  the  Old  Testament,  I.  Kings, 

101-102. 

ETHIOPIAN  EUNUCH,  The,  Acts 
L,  398-419. 


E  TinOPIA  NS— EXILE 


121 


ETHIOPIANS,      Numbers,      136; 

Isaiah  I.,  93,  222,  275. 
ETHUARCH,  Acts  II.,  153. 
EUCHARIST,  aicbration  of,  Acts 

II.,  393-401. 
EUBULUS,  Pastoral  Fpistlcs,4  i  5. 
EUNICE,    Pastoral    Epistles,    21, 

EUODIA  AND  SYNTVCHE,  Phi! 
ippians,   t,20-:^22. 

EUSEBIUS,  Jeremiah  II.,  53;  Dan- 
iel, 96;  Acts  I.,  vii.,  9,  65, 
79,  102,  156,  2>2T>,  344.  4 1 •'5, 
419;  II.,  171,  181,  199,  241, 
320;  Pastoral  Epistles,  6,  14, 
2^,  2>7,  257,  371,  379,  415, 
418,  419;  James,  2,  14,  17, 
162;  John  Epistles,  12,  96, 
163. 

EUTHALIUS,  James,  6,  7. 

EUTVCHIANISM,ActsI.,  48,  314. 

EUTVCHUS,  Acts  II.,  403. 

EVANS,  T.  S.,  Pastoral  Epistles, 
2S7;  John  Epistles,  ix. 

EVE  tempted.  Genesis,   15  sfj. 

EVIDENCES,  argument  from  de- 
sign. Genesis,  9. 

EVIL  DOERS,  their  society  dis- 
tasteful, Psalms  I.,  253,  254. 

EVIL  MERODACH,  Jeremiah  II., 
85,  86;  Daniel,  203. 

EVIL  THOUGHT,  Deuteronomy, 
88. 

EVOLUTION  and  creation.  Gene- 
sis, 10;  Proverbs,  113. 

of  religion,  180. 

Physical,    completes     nothing, 

Job,  241. 

reveals   Divine    wisdom,    Job, 

318. 

Spiritual,   Judges,  4,  85,  109; 

Jcb,  5S. 


EWALD,  H.,  Job,  II,  15,  218; 
Psalms  I.,  59,  loi,  22,2,,  274, 
363;  II.,  59,  65,  105,  256, 
2i2>7^  340,  418;  III.,  16,  17, 
81,  120,  215,  421;  Isaiah  I., 
4,  125,  156;  II.,  18,  121,  269, 
299,  336,  343,  ^^7,  412,  415, 
435>  436;  Jeremiah  I.,  12,  130, 
144,  224,  401;  Ezekiel,  71; 
Daniel,  20,  24,  31,  81,  85,  93, 
115,  130,  131,  171,  188,  205, 
239,  297;  Twelve  Prophets  I., 
295,  304,  358,  436;  II.,  59, 
123,  127,  154,  168,  285,  308, 
362,  364,  2i77,  45 1,  498 ;  Luke, 
90;  II.  Corinthians,  246;  Ephe- 
sians,  229;  Philippians,  173; 
Pastoral  Epistles,  9,  407. 

on    the    pillar    of    the    cloud, 

Numbers,  91. 

EXAMPLE  and  conversion, 
James,  359. 

Duty  and,  Romans,  389-392. 

of  Jesus  Christ,  Romans,  393- 

399;  Peter,  100;  John  Epis- 
tles, 118-132. 

EXCITEMENT,  Craving  for. 
Judges,  310. 

Worship  and,  James,  315-320. 

EXCLUSIVENESS  and  its  begin- 
nings, Ezra,  60-68. 

saved  Judaism,  Ezra,   10. 

EXCOMMUNICATION  as  taught 
by  Paul,  I.  Corinthians,  113, 
1 2'^ ;  Pastoral  Epistles,  74,  303. 

EXERCISE,  Bodily,  profitable, 
Pastoral  Epistles,   143-145. 

EXILE,  Effects  of.  Twelve  Proph- 
ets I.,  279-281. 

EXILE,  The,  and  the  restoration, 
Jeremiah  II.,  308-364. 


122 


EXILE— EXODUS  XV. 


EXILE,  The  call  to  return  from, 
Isaiah  II.,  71-235. 

Condition  of  exiles,  Isaiah  II., 

57. 

Commerce  of,  Isaiah  II.,  62. 

Correspondence  with  the  ex- 
iles, Jeremiah  II.,  131-140. 

First  deportation,  Isaiah  II, , 

Israel  at  the  end  of,  Isaiah  II., 

66. 

Israel  in,  Isaiah  II.,  48-68. 

Literary  efforts  of,  Isaiah  II., 

59. 
March  to  Babylon,  Isaiah  II., 

48. 

Reason  of,  Isaiah  II.,  28. 

Religious  life  of  the,  Isaiah  II., 

61. 
Return     from,     Ezra,    36-47; 

Isaiah  I.,  195,  40i,  429,  440, 

443,  450;  II.,  381-467- 
Ruin  and,  Jeremiah  II.,   295- 

307. 
Second  deportation,  Isaiah  II., 

35- 
Scriptural   experience    of    the, 

Isaiah  II.,  6}^. 
Traces    in    Jewish    literature, 

Isaiah  II.,  63. 
EXISTENCE,  Meaning  of,  Genesis, 

14. 
EXODUS  L,  5,  Acts  I.,  310. 
EXODUS  II.,  2,  Hebrews,  239. 

II,  Hebrews,  245. 

23,  James,  281. 

EXODUS  III.,  5,  Jeremiah  I.,   99. 

6,  Matthew,  70;  John  I.,  4. 

7,  Jeremiah  I.,  159;  Matthew, 

70. 
14,    Matthew,   iii.,    14;    Ephe- 

sians,  18. 
15,  Psalms  III.,  364. 


EXODUS  IV.,  6,  II.  Kings,  6^. 

10,  Jeremiah  I.,  70. 

21,  Chronicles,  288. 

22,  Leviticus,  458;  Luke,  115; 

Romans,  247. 
EXODUS  v.,  2,  Daniel,  175. 
EXODUS  VL,  8,  Psalms  III.,  147. 

18,  Chronicles,  430. 

20,  Leviticus,  381. 

EXODUS  VII.,  II,  Daniel,  146. 

20,  21,  Revelation,  141,  267. 

EXODUS  IX.,  10,  Revelation,  26-j. 

15,  16,  Peter,  88. 

23-25,  Revelation,  140. 

29,  Leviticus,  504. 

EXODUS    X.,    12-15,    Revelation, 

146. 

21-23,  Revelation,  144,  268. 

29,  Jeremiah  I.,  171. 

EXODUS  XL,  9,  Psalms  II.,    132. 
EXODUS  XIL,  II,  Mark  376. 

14,  Matthew,  392. 

15,  Numbers,  84. 

2y,  Jeremiah  I.,  165. 

33,  Psalms  III.,  135. 

40,  41,  Galatians,  204. 

EXODUS  XIIL,  II,  Numbers,  38. 
12-15,  Leviticus,  554;  Ezekiel, 

181. 

13,  Leviticus,  554. 

15,  Psalms  III.,  364. 

19,  Joshua,  22^. 

EXODUS    XIV.,    24,    Psalms    II., 

259- 

2y,  Psalms  III.,  369. 

28,  Psalms  III.,  143. 

30,  Chronicles,   Ti'&2. 

31,  Psalms  III.,  143. 

EXODUS  XV.,    I,   Revelation,  19, 

261. 
3,  Chronicles,  233. 


EXODUS  XV.— EXODUS  XXIV 


123 


4,    21, 


Psah 


II., 


78. 


KXODUS    XV., 

318. 
II,  Psalms  II.,  379,465; 

207. 

1 6,  Psalms  II.,  379. 

17,  Psalms  I.,  317. 

20,  Daniel,  30. 

22,,  Revelation,  142. 

KXODUS  XVI.,  3,  Jeremiah  I. 
EXODUS      XVII.,      1-7,      Deuter- 
onomy, 465;  Psalms  III.,  52. 

7,  Psalms  II.,  419. 

12,   Twelve  Prophets  II.,  140. 

13,  Joshua,  26. 

16,  Daniel,  202. 

EXODUS     XVIII.,      II,      Daniel, 
202. 

13,  Deuteronomy,  386. 

19,  Jeremiah  I.,  96. 

25,  Ezekiel,  440. 

EXODUS  XIX.,  3-5,  Matthew,  70; 

Ephesians,      50;      Revelation, 

211. 
5,   Psalms  I.,  235;  Ephesians, 

60;  Peter,  tj. 
6,  Jeremiah  I.,  290;  II,,   279; 

Romans,  411;  Peter,  J2. 
18,  Hebrews,  306;  Revelation, 

265. 
EXODUS  XX.,  2,  Psalms  II.,  421. 
6,  Deuteronomy,  123;  Psalms 

III.,  108. 

8,  Jeremiah  I.,  367,  zyz. 

II,  Deuteronomy,  67,  68. 

12,  Ephesians,  382. 

17,  Romans,  196. 

19,  Galatians,  218. 

20,  Deuteronomy,  112. 

24,  Deuteronomy,  19;  Joshua, 

206;    I.    Kings,    121;  Ezekiel, 

399- 


EXODUS  XXI.,  2,  Jeremiah  I.,  146 ; 

n.,  347- 
— -3,  4,  Leviticus,  501. 

5,  6,  Romans,  176. 

6,  Psalms  II.,  70. 

7,  Ezra,  255. 

7,  8,  Leviticus,  404. 

12,  23-36,  Leviticus,  483, 

14,  I.  Kings,  91. 

22,  Deuteronomy,  383. 

EXODUS    XXII.,    2,    Jeremiah  L, 

104. 
4,    7,    9,    Jeremiah    I.,    342; 

Revelation,  307. 

8,  Psalms  II.,  70. 

9,  Jeremiah  L,  146, 

17,  Deuteronomy,  2t2fi' 

19,  Deuteronomy,  171. 

20,  Chronicles,  352. 

25,  Ezra,  251. 

28,  John  Epistles,  95. 

29,  Jeremiah  I.,  157;  II.,  286; 

Ezekiel,  181. 
EXODUS  XXIII.,  4,  5,  Jeremiah  I., 

265. 

10,  Jeremiah  II.,  146. 

II,  Deuteronomy,  430. 

12,  Jeremiah  I.,  t^tz. 

18,  Jeremiah  I.,  165. 

19,  Jeremiah  L,  78. 

20,  Daniel,  180;  John  I.,  4. 

EXODUS  XXIV.,  I,  9,  10,  Leviti- 
cus, 241. 
6,  Philippians,  9. 

7,  Leviticus,  524;  Jeremiah  II., 

346. 

10,  Ezekiel,  28. 

13,  Joshua,  28. 

14,  Jeremiah  I.,  146, 

20,  Deuteronomy,  19. 


124 


EXODUS  XXV.— EXPOSITOR 


EXODUS  XXV.,    lo,   Jeremiah   I., 

121. 

20,  Revelation,  y  t^. 

31-40,  Leviticus,  475. 

EXODUS XXVI.,  I,  Revelation,  70. 

EXODUS  XXVII.,  20,  I.  Samuel, 
52. 

EXODUS  XXVIII.,  Leviticus,  191. 

17,  19,  Ezekiel,  258. 

26,  John  Epistles,  13. 

35,  Leviticus,  196. 

36-38,  Leviticus,  197. 

38,  Leviticus,  262. 

39-42,  Ezekiel,  439. 

^41,  Jeremiah  I.,  67. 

42,  43,  Leviticus,  201. 

EXODUS,  XXIX,  30,  John  Epis- 
tles, 13. 

T^G,  Jeremiah  I.,  67, 

38-46,   Leviticus,   60;    Ezekiel, 

473- 

EXODUS  XXX.,  7,  8,  I.  Samuel, 
52;  Chronicles,  422. 

11-16,  Chronicles,  405;  Eze- 
kiel, 453- 

13,  Ezekiel,  452;  Mark,  308. 

22-2Ti,  Leviticus,  201, 

39,  40,  Leviticus,  80. 

EXODUS  XXXL,  3,  Ephesians,  93. 

12-17,  Leviticus,  520. 

13,  Leviticus,  454. 

14,  15,  Jeremiah  L,  367. 

17,  Deuteronomy,  68. 

EXODUS  XXXIL,  9,  Jeremiah  II., 
291. 

15-20,  Deuteronomy,  324. 

17,  Joshua,  28,  29. 

26,  Joshua,  342. 

26-35,  Chronicles,  224. 

31,  32,  Ezra,  141;  Jeremiah  I., 

358. 


EXODUS  XXXIII. ,  1 1.  Joshua,  30; 
I.  Kings,   125;  Proverbs,  235. 

13,  Psalms  III.,  414. 

20,  Daniel,  262. 

23,  Ezekiel,   t^^^. 

EXODUS    XXXIV.,     2,    I.    Kings, 
430. 

6,  Psalms  III.,  428;  Jeremiah 

I.,    306;    Twelve   Prophets   I., 
435;  Peter,  158,  349. 

7,    Psalms    III.,    108;    Revela- 
tion, 321. 

9,  Pastoral  Epistles,   ^^2^, 

II,  Numbers.  137. 

15,   16,  Song  of  Solomon,   44. 

17-26,  Ezekiel,  181. 

19,  Romans,  253. 

20,  Jeremiah  II.,  286. 

2Ty,  Leviticus,  453. 

29-35,  II-  Corinthians,  130, 

34,  11.  Corinthians,  132. 

EXODUS  XL.,  18,  Psalms,  75. 

35,  Revelation,  264. 

EXODUS   OF    THE    HEBREWS, 
Exodus,  195-198. 

Route  of  the.  Exodus,  196. 

EXPEDIENCV      condemned,       I. 
Samuel,  215. 

of  Saul,  I.  Samuel,  214. 

EXPERIENCE,    Advancement    is 
through.  Genesis,  335. 

Argument  of,  Colossians,  112. 

cannot  be  passed   on,  Deuter- 
onomy, 164. 

confirmatory,   Psalms  I.,  369. 

Personal.  Leviticus,  217,  231; 

Psalms  II.,  20. 

teaches  faith.  Genesis,  255. 

EXPOSITOR,  The,  Acts  I.,  395 
II.,  viii.;  Galatians,  98,  218 
Hebrews,  162;  James,  98,  115 
Revelation,  79,  122,  329,  391 


EXPOSURE— EZEKIEL  XX VIE 


125 


EXPOSURE   a  punishment  of  sin. 

EZEKIEL  v.,  10,  II.  Kings,  452. 

Song  of  Solomon,   1 14. 

EZEKIEL  VL,  11,  Revelation,  90. 

EXTREME     UNCTION,      James, 

EZEKIEL    VIL,   9,  Jeremiah   II., 

332-334- 

277- 

EZEKIEL  and  Isaiah,  Ezckiel,  35- 

16,  II.  Kings,  448. 

38. 

2T^,  Jeremiah  II.,  277. 

and  Jeremiah,  F/ekiel,   1325. 

EZEKIEL  VIII.,  14, Twelve  Proph- 

 antl    the    Messiah,    Isaiah   II., 

ets  IL,  483. 

404. 

16,  Daniel,  226. 

attitude  towards   the  heathen 

17,  IL  Kings,  440. 

world,  Ezekicl,   141. 

EZEKIEL  IX.,  2,  Daniel,  192. 

Call  of,  Ezekicl,  42-55- 

6,  Peter,  192. 

compared        with       Jeremiah, 

EZEKIELXL,  19,  II.  Corinthians, 

Isaiah  II.,  34,  46. 

109. 

conception    of  salvation,   Eze- 

22,  II.  Kings,  453. 

kiel,  357-366. 

EZEKIEL    XII.,   2,  Jeremiah   IL, 

conception  of  sin,  Ezekiel,  139. 

27i- 

picture  of  captivity,  Isaiah  II., 

13,  II.  Kings,  459;  Daniel,  49. 

59- 

24,  Song  of  Solomon,  82. 

a  prophet  of  the    Exile,    Eze- 

EZEKIEL XIIL,  1-23;  II.  Kings, 

kiel,  3. 

444. 

relation    to    the    Pentateuch, 

6,  7,  Song  of  Solomon,  ?>2. 

Ezekiel,  396-403. 

10,  IL  Kings,  450. 

Sabbath  law  of,  Numbers,  348. 

EZEKIEL  XIV.,    14,  Jeremiah  L, 

sin  bearer,  Isaiah  II.,  352. 

158. 

vision  of  a  theocracy,  Ezekiel, 

21,  Jeremiah  I.,  314. 

381-499. 

EZEKIEL    XVI.,    8,  Jeremiah  L, 

EZEKIEL  I.,    13,  14,  Revelation, 

7^- 

72>- 

15-34>  II-  Kings,  441. 

21,  Daniel,  8r. 

2Tf,  Song  of  Solomon,  44. 

26,  Daniel,  248. 

25,  Jeremiah  L,  108. 

28,  Revelation,   17, 

34,  Jeremiah  L,  98. 

EZEKIEL II.,  6  8,  II.  Corinthians, 

53,  Psalms,  131. 

294- 

EZEKIEL  XVIL,    1-6,   II.   Kings, 

9,  10,  Revelation,  76,  15S. 

43-S- 

i8,  Isaiah  II.,  426. 

4,  Ecclesiastes,  41, 

EZEKIEL  III.,  4,  Revelation,  158. 

7  10,  II.  Kings,  445. 

16-21,  Song  of  Solomon,   281. 

10,  James,  86. 

l.ZEKIEL  IV.,  1-3.  II.  Kings,  447. 

12,  IL  Kings,  424,  437. 

13,  14,  Daniel,   130. 

- — 13,   14,  Jeremiah  II. ,  97. 

16,  17,  Revelation,  92. 

15,  IL  Kings,  425,  445. 

126                    EZEKIEL  XVII.- 

-EZEKIEL  XXXVI. 

EZEKIEL    XVIL,     17,  Jeremiah 

EZEKIEL  XXVL,  7,  Daniel,  153. 

II.,  149. 

16,  Jeremiah  I.,  293. 

22,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  31. 

3ij  Jeremiah  I.,  2Ti2. 

25,  II.  Kings,  444. 

EZEKIEL  XXVIL,  3,  Song  of  Solo- 

EZEKIEL XVIII.,  2-30,  II.  Kings, 

mon,  ?>2. 

15- 

17,  Acts  IL,  183. 

3,  4,  Song  of  Solomon,  322. 

18,  Jeremiah  L,  248. 

20,  Chronicles,  447;  Jeremiah 

EZEKIEL XXVIIL,  8,  Jeremiah  I., 

n.,  341. 

232. 

21-23,  Chronicles,  449. 

12,  Song  of  Solomon,  ^2. 

EZEKIEL    XIX.,    1-4,    II.   Kings, 

13,  Revelation,  26^^. 

412. 

24,  II.  Corinthians,  352. 

3,  4,  Jeremiah  II.,  8. 

EZEKIEL  XXIX.,  3,  Daniel,  238; 

5-7,  Jeremiah  II.,  84. 

Revelation,  202. 

6-9,  II.  Kings,  434. 

4,  IL  Kings,  340. 

6,  7,  15-18,  Leviticus,  370. 

10,  IL  Kings,  475. 

II,  12,  Exodus,  309. 

17,  Daniel,  10. 

18,  Jeremiah  I.,  225. 

EZEKIEL  XXX.,  3,  Peter,  ^27. 

23,  Psalms  III.,  147. 

EZEKIEL    XXXL,    2-15,    Daniel, 

25,  Galatians,  219. 

219. 

32,  Acts  I,,  227. 

3-18,  Daniel,  189. 

EZEKIEL  XXL,  20-24,  11.  Kings, 

II,  Isaiah  I.,  137. 

446. 

EZEKIEL  XXXIL,  2,  Daniel,  238. 

21,  Jeremiah  IL,  143. 

21,  Isaiah  L,  137. 

28-32,  IL  Kings,  447. 

EZEKIEL  XXXIIL,  31,  I.  Kings, 

EZEKIEL  XXIL,   1-12,  Jeremiah 

220. 

IL,  277. 

EZEKIEL  XXXIV.,  2-5,  Jeremiah 

25,  Peter,  225. 

I.,    lOI. 

26,  Twelve  Prophets  II. ,  69. 

4,  Ephesians,  410. 

28,  Song  of  Solomon,  ?>2. 

16,  I.  Kings,  397. 

30,  Psalms  III.,  146. 

23,  24,  Chronicles,  144;  Isaiah 

EZEKIEL  XXIIL,  4,  Twelve  Proph- 

IL, 404. 

ets  IL,  238. 

EZEKIEL      XXXV.,      5,      Twelve 

15,    Ecclesiastes,    41;    Daniel, 

Prophets  IL,  180. 

206. 

10-15,  Isaiah  I.,  439. 

2y,  James,  227. 

12,  Twelve  Prophets  IL,  182. 

34,  Twelve  Prophets  IL,  6%. 

EZEKIEL  XXXVL,   20,   Romans, 

EZEKIEL  XXV.,  4,  5,  10,  Twelve 

69. 

Prophets  IL,  168. 

25,   Twelve  Prophets  IL,  484. 

9,  Jeremiah  IL,  237. 

25-27,  Galatians,  351;  Revela- 

 12-14,  Song  of  Solomon,  302. 

tion,   lOI. 

EZEKIEL  XXXVI.— EZRA  IX. 


127 


1:ZL:K1K1.    XXXVI.,   26,    Psalms, 

EZR.A      and     foreign     marriages, 

136;    II.    Corinthians,  109. 

Ezra,  T31-152. 

35,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  415. 

——assembles  the  people  at  Jerusa- 

EZEKIEL   XXXVII.,    1-4,   Daniel, 

lem,  Judges,  38. 

Cost  of  his  success,  Ezra,  153- 

324. 

162. 

9,  Daniel,  11,  108. 

Expedition  of,  Ezra,  1 19-130. 

16.  17,  Joshua,  301. 

Mission  of,  Ezra,  107-118. 

25,  Isaiah  II.,  244. 

EZRA,     The    book,    Ezra,     i-ii; 

EZEKIEL  XXXVIII.,  4,  IL  Kings, 

Twelve  Prophets  II.,  204. 

340. 

EZRA  I.,   2,   3,    Ecclesiastes,    62; 

8,  Jeremiah  I.,  171. 

Twelve  Prophets  II.,  69. 

21,   Twelve  Prophets  II.,  488. 

5,  Joshua,  317. 

EZEKIEL  XXXIX.,  9,  Revelation, 

EZRA  II.,  2,  Chronicles,  137. 

338. 

36-39,    Chronicles,    103;    Eze- 

14,  Revelation,  339. 

kiel,  434. 

17-20,  Revelation,  328, 

58,  Ezekiei,  434. 

EZEKIEL  XL.,   i,   2,  Revelation, 

61-63,  Chronicles,  47. 

36S. 

63,  Chronicles,  241. 

2-5,  Revelation,  169,  365. 

68,  Ephesians,  416. 

EZEKIEL  XLIIL,   2,   Revelation, 

EZRA  III.,  3,  Ephesians,  416. 

368. 

II,  Psalms  III.,  234. 

3,  Jeremiah  I.,  7^. 

EZRA   IV.,   1-4,  Twelve  Prophets 

15,  16,  Isaiah  I.,  211. 

II.,    2X8. 

EZEKIEL  XLIV.,  1-3,  Revelation, 

2,  Jeremiah  I.,  89. 

368. 

9,  10,  Jeremiah  II.,  255. 

9-16,    Ezra,    44;  Jeremiah  I., 

EZRA  VI.,  18,  Chronicles,  104. 

401. 

EZRA  VII.,  6,  Leviticus,  11. 

EZEKIEL  XLVIII.,    31,    Revela 

9,  Psalms  III.,  290. 

tion,  365. 

12,  Daniel,  153. 

35,  Isaiah  II. ,  148. 

15-20,  Ezekiei,  435. 

EZER    AND    ELEAD,   Chronicles, 

EZRA  IX.,  I,  Chronicles,  77. 

87-90. 

5,  Ezekiei,  472. 

128 


FA  BRICIUS—FA ITH 


FABRICIUS,  Acts  I.,  25,  79;   II., 

315,  367. 

FAILURE,  Apparent,  of  the  Gos- 
pel, Pastoral  Epistles,  402. 

Impossibility  of,  Hebrews,  99. 

in  our  day,  Judges,  162. 

Lesson  of,  Exodus,  85;  Joshua, 

190,  191. 

Samson  a  type  of,  Judges,  320. 

Social,  Job,  163. 

"  FAINT  YET  PURSUING," 
Judges,  191,  192. 

FAIR  BAIRN,  A.  M.,  Job,  57;  I. 
Corinthians,  335. 

FAIRBAIRN,  Patrick,  On  proph- 
ecy, Revelation,  230. 

FAITH,  Galatians,  224;  Colossi- 
ans,      23-25;      Thessalonians, 

365-369- 

. Age  of,  Joshua,  139. 

Analysed,  Genesis,  171. 

and  happiness.  Job,  45. 

and  prosperity,  Mark,  155. 

and  works,  Luther  quoted,  Ex- 
odus, 282. 

and  works,  Romans,  115,  116; 

James,  135-148. 

an    assurance    and     a    proof, 

Hebrews,  198-209. 

Blessedness   of,   I.  Samuel,  12. 

born  of  despair,  II.  Corinthi- 
ans, 23-34. 

A  clear  hope  springs  from.  Gen- 
esis, 94. 

Conflict  of,  Hebrews,  272-289. 

Death  tests,  Numbers,  2,t^-j. 


FAITH,    Deficiencies    of,    Thessa- 
lonians, 125-128. 
delivered  to  the  Saints,  James, 

Development  of,  Judges,  4. 

Ebb  and  flow  of,  Judges,  233. 

Emotion  helps.  Exodus,  30. 

Enthusiasm  of.  Numbers,  303. 

Exultant  songs  of,  Psalms  I.. 

260. 

for  common  needs,  Genesis,  74. 

Growth  of.  Psalms  II.,  228. 

hindrance  in  its  decay,  Ezekiel, 

350,  351- 

The    holiness    of   Christ    and, 

John  I.,  234. 

in  Christ  tested,  John  I.,  250. 

in  danger,  Psalms  I.,  155. 

Loss  of.  Judges,  323. 

Moral    results    of,    Isaiah    I,, 

106,   163. 

Necessity  of,  Matthew,  247. 

of  Abel,  Genesis,  35,  36;  He- 
brews, 223  225. 

of  Abraham,   Genesis,   ?>6,  9,y^ 

141-144,  198-211,  242;  Job, 
27;  Hebrews,  212-229;  James, 
1 56-161. 

of  the   Centurion,   Luke,    195- 

208. 

of  David,  I.  Samuel,  2^Ti-2?^s^ 

22>7. 

of  demons,  James,  149-156. 

of  Enoch,  Hebrews,  219. 

of  Hannah,  I.  Samuel,  11. 

—of  Hebrews  deprecated,  Judges, 
118. 


FA  1 1 71— FA  RRA  R 


120 


FAITH  of  Jacob,  Genesis,  419. 

of  Jew  and  Gentile  contrasted, 

Romans,  264-267. 

of  Job,  Job,  67-81. 

of  Jonathan,   I.   Samuel,  220- 

224. 

of  Moses,  Numbers,  336;  He- 
brews, 232-256. 

of  Noah,  Hebrews,  215. 

of  Rahab,  James,  161-164. 

of  Thomas,  John  H.,  375. 

Politics    and,    Isaiah    I.,    221- 

Power  through,  Judges,  203. 

power  to  shape  history,  Isaiah 

I.,  109,  302. 

a  principle.  Genesis,  133. 

a  principle  of  the  old  Testa- 
ment, Exodus,  10. 

Rarity  of,  Genesis,  170. 

Results    of   coming    of,    Gala- 

tians,  227-241, 

Righteousness   of,  Philippians, 

217-236. 

Righteousness  through,  Ro- 
mans,  T^2>^  34. 

taught  by  e.\perience,  Genesis, 

255- 
taught  in  the  books  of  Kings, 

II.  Kings,  485. 
The  test  of.  Genesis,   92,    93, 

117. 
Tests    of,     Pastoral     Epistles, 

290. 

Three  barriers  of.  Job,  235. 

Toilers  furnish  the  army  ofthe, 

Judges,  128. 

True,  Joshua,  216. 

Victory  of,  Isaiah  I.,  352-367; 

II.  Corinthians,   157-172, 
work  of,  Thessalonians,  26, 


FAITHLESSNESS       is      foolish, 
Numbers,  161, 

of  Israel,  Judges,  '^2. 

FALL,  The,  Genesis,  15-37. 

difficulties     of    interpretation, 

Genesis,   16. 

FALLEN   HUMANITY  not  to  be 
misjudged,  E.xodus,  2>^-j. 

Our  estrangement  from.  Exo- 
dus, 19. 

FALSE  DECRETALS,  Acts  I.,  2,7 2>. 

FALSE      REPORTS    against    re- 
formers, Acts  I.,  291. 

in   circulation,    Thessalonians, 

330. 

to  be  discredited.  Exodus,  358. 

FALSE  WITNESS  abominable  to 
God,  Proverbs,  91. 

forbidden.  Exodus,  324-328. 

in  India,  Deuteronomy,  86. 

FAMILY,  The  Christian,  Colossi- 
ans,   335-353;  Hebrews,  241. 

a  Divine  institution,  Leviticus, 

430. 

feast   of  new  moon.  Numbers, 

350. 

inheritance     of    character,    I. 

Kings,  118. 

life,  Ephesians,  351-393- 

lifenot  unbroken,  Joshua,  125. 

plottings.  Genesis,  267. 

Solidarity  of.   Psalms  L,  370. 

Unhappiness  in  the,  Genesis,  59. 

FAMINE  in  the  reign    of   David, 
11.  Samuel,  2>26-2in- 

in  Samaria,  II.  Kings,  76-85. 

FAN.\TICISM,  Proverbs,  287. 
FARRAR,    F.    W.,  Thessalonians, 
312,   316,  317,  326;  Pastoral 
Epistles,  412;  James,  2i^^  70, 
393,  399. 


130 


FA  RRA  R—FISKE 


and 


19, 


FARRAR,    F.  W.,   Dark7iess 

dawti,  Romans,  51. 
St  Paul,  Acts  II.,  15,  16, 

20,  50,  51,  152. 
FASHION,  I.  Samuel,  118. 
FASTING,  Christ,  Luke,  iii. 
Controversy  concerning,Mark, 

61-66. 
ordered    by    Saul,    I,    Samuel, 

233- 

Principle  of,  Matthew,  St,,  84. 

FAT,  Prohibition  of,  Leviticus,  99. 

FATALISM,  Isaiah  I.,  no. 

FATHERHOOD  OF  GOD,  Deuter- 
onomy, 74;  Isaiah  II.,  453; 
Jeremiah  I.,  279;  Twelve 
Prophets  I.,  290-298;  Luke, 
136;  Ephesians,  209-312;  He- 
.    brews,  ;^2,  145. 

FATHERS,  The,  and  pagan  cul- 
ture, Pastoral  Epistles,  227, 
230,  232. 

Back  to,  Job,  135. 

FAULT  FINDING,  Love  of,  James, 

251- 
FEAR,  Judges,  296. 

Atheism  of,  Isaiah  I.,  168-178. 

Influence  of,  Joshua,  189. 

Lack    of,   among  prophets,   I. 

Kings,  482. 
of  God,  Exodus,  331;  Psalms 

L,  327- 
FA  YUM  MSS.,  Acts  I.,   359;  H., 

356. 
FEASTS    OF    THE    HEBREWS, 

Leviticus,   447-473;   Numbers, 

351-359- 

FECHIN,  St.,  Acts  II.,  89,  278. 

FEDERALIST  THEOLOGY,  He- 
brews, 126. 

FELIX,  Acts  II.,  430-432. 


FELIX  OF  NOLA,  II.  Kings,   71. 
FELL,  Bishop  John,  on  Cyprian, 

Acts  II.,  401. 
FELLO\VSHIP,Consecration  and, 

Leviticus,  224. 

Human,  Exodus,  76. 

in    the    church,    Joshua,    162, 

163. 

of  the  spirit,  Philippians,  loi. 

Vital  to  the  Passover,  Exodus, 

172. 
with  Christ,  I.  Corinthians,  29; 

II.  Corinthians,  171. 
with  Christ  a  necessity,  Joshua, 

69. 

with  God,  Leviticus,  123. 

FERGUSON,   Sir  Samuel,  Lays  of 

ike  Western  Gael,  Acts  I.,  no. 
FERRAR,  Nicholas,  Acts  II.,  176. 
FESTUS,  Acts  II.,  448. 
FIELD,    Frederic,    John  Epistles, 

202. 
FILL  THE  HAND,  Numbers,  32. 
FINDLAY,  G.  -G.,  Epistles  of  Paul, 

Acts  II.,  60,  295. 

on  Galatians,  Acts  II.,  234. 

FINGAL  AND  ITS  CHURCHES, 

Acts  I.,  6. 
FIRMILIAN,    BISHOP  OF  CAE- 

SAREA,  Peter,  xii. 
FIRSTBORN,    Law    of  the.   Exo- 
dus, 199-204. 

Number  of,  Numbers,  2>^. 

Sanctity  of.  Numbers,  ^^y. 

FIRST-FRUITS,  Day  of.  Numbers, 

354- 

FISHER,  Edward,  Marrow  of  Mod- 
ern Divinity,  Acts  I.,  134. 

FISKE,  John,  Destiny  of  vinn, 
quoted,  Isaiah  I.,  390;  John 
Epistles,  250. 


FITZ— 

FRA  UD                                         131 

FITZ,    Ralph,    Archbishop  of  Ar- 

FORGIVENESS,  Confession    and, 

magh,  Acts  II.,  22y. 

Ezra,  141. 

FLATTERY,  Proverbs,  i68. 

Motive    of,    Colossians,    313- 

FLAVEL,    John,    concerning    his 

315- 

father,  I.  Samuel,  203. 

of  sin,  Genesis,  44;  Psalms  II., 

FLESH,  Christ's  spirit  and,  Gala- 

129;  III.,  104;   Isaiah   I.,    13, 

tians,  347-360. 

71     sq.     326-330,     361,     381; 

No    confidence    in  the,   Phihp- 

Ezekiel,     361-364;      Matthew, 

pians,   170-198. 

118-121;  John  I.,  267;  Philip- 

 The  word,  Hebrews,  152. 

pians,      227-232;     Colossians, 

Work   of  the,   Galatians,   361- 

66-69,  211. 

374- 

of  tresspasses,   Matthew,  258- 

FLEURY,     Claude,     Ecclesiastical 

266. 

History,  Acts  II.,  246. 

Repentance     and.     Chronicles, 

FLIES,    The   plague    of,   Exodus, 

448-454. 

137-140. 

FORMALISM,    Ecclesiastes,     173, 

FLOCK,  How  to  tend  the,  Peter, 

174;  Isaiah  I.,  216,  240;  Gala- 

201-212. 

tians,    270;    Colossians,    251- 

FOLLY,    Proverbs,    6y,   92,    122, 

256. 

131,  205. 

FORMS,  Use  of.  Acts  II.,  121. 

FOOD,    Spiritual,    Exodus,    244- 

FORNICATION     at    Corinth,    I. 

248. 

Corinthians,     145-159;     Gala- 

FOOL, The,  Proverbs,  337-349. 

tians,  363-365- 

FOOTWASHING,    The,    John   II., 

FORTY  DAYS  after  the  resurrec- 

73-88. 

tion,  Matthew,  438-446. 

FORASMUCH,  Luke,  8. 

• Conversation  of.  Acts  I.,  23-42. 

FORBEARANCE     of    Christians, 

FORWARD,  Joshua,  272. 

Philippians,    326;   Colossians, 

FOX,  George,   Acts    I.,    185;    IL, 

311- 

122. 

of  God,  Numbers,  225. 

FOXLEY,    Joseph,    Hulseaii    Lec- 

FORCE,   Atheism    of,    Isaiah    I., 

tures,  371. 

168-178. 

FRANCIS    OF    ASSISSI,    St.,    I. 

FOREKNOWLEDGE     OF     GOD, 

Kings,    421;    Proverbs,    138, 

Peter,  8-1 1. 

190;  Galatians,  457. 

FORESIGHT,   Faith  supplies  the 

FRANCIS    OF   SALES,    Acts  IL, 

want  of,  Genesis,  90. 

279. 

Success  depends  largely  upon, 

FRANCISCANS,  The,  and  Metho- 

Genesis, 90. 

dists  compared,  Acts  I.,  163. 

FORGIVENESS,    Proverbs,    314- 

FRAUD    does    not    pay,    Joshua, 

324;  Hebrews,  145  sq. 

220,  221;  I.  Samuel,  2>2i^' 

by  Moses,  Numbers,  148. 

in  weight,  Proverbs,  218. 

132 


FRA  UD— FUTURE  LIFE 


FRAUD,  Pious,  Joshua,  219. 

rebuked  in  the  Bible,  Joshua, 

222. 

towards  God,  Proverbs,  220. 

FREEDOM  and  ordination,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 122. 

a  growth.  Judges.  86. 

• Human,    Proverbs,  250-261. 

illusory,  Numbers,   no. 

in  the  church,  II.  Corinthians, 

62. 

Moral,  Ezekiel,  153-158. 

of  the  Gospel,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 362,  363. 

Perils  of,  Galatians,  333-346. 

the  practice   of  truth.  Judges, 

228. 

under    Christianit}-,   Numbers, 

209. 

FREEWILL  OFFERINGS,  Leviti- 
cus, 104. 

FRENCH  REVOLUTION,  Its 
principles  adopted,  Leviticus, 
125- 

FRIEND  OF  GOD,  Tames,  160, 
162. 

FRIENDS,  The  Denomination 
and  non-resistance,  Chronicles, 
389- 

on    inspiration,    Acts  I.,    185, 

186. 

spirituality  and  rules,  Acts  II., 

122. 

Women  speaking  among,  I.  Cor- 
inthians, 255. 


FRIENDSHIP,  Proverbs,227-238. 

of    Jesus    Christ,    I.    Samuel, 

328. 

of    Jonathan    and    David,    I. 

Samuel,  292,  317-328. 

of  Paul  and  Timothy,  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  26-30. 

of  the  }oung,  I.  Samuel,    Ti2y. 

FROGS,    The  plague  of.   Exodus, 

FRONMULLER,  G.  F.  C,  James» 

399,  408. 
FRUIT  BEARING,  John  II.,  184- 

190;  Colossians,  47-49. 
FRUITS,   Known  by  their,  Peter, 

297-312. 
FRYTH,      John,     reply     to     Sir 

Thomas      More,     Ecclesiastes? 

303- 
FULLER,  J.  M.,  Acts  L,  120. 
FUTURE,  Our,  II.  Corinthians,  56; 

Ephesians,     316;    Colossians, 

473- 
Presuming    upon   our,   James, 

261-272. 
FUTURE  LIFE,  Numbers,  5. 
—The  Christian   hope  of  a,    II. 

Corinthians,   173-135. 

Faith  in  a,  Ecclesiastes,  256. 

Old     Testament     faith    in    a, 

Psalms  II.,  loi. 

Right  view  of.  Numbers,  159. 

seems  dim,  Numbers,  154. 


GAA L—GA LA  TIA NS  III. 


133 


GAAL,  Son  of  Ebed,  Judges,  221. 
GAD    blessed    by    Jacob,   Genesis, 

444. 
GAD,    the    tribe,    Moses    blesses, 

Deuteronomy,  469. 

Reuben  and,  Numbers,  374. 

their  decay,  Numbers,  380. 

GAIUS,  Acts  II.,  326. 
GALATIA,   Church  of,  Galatians, 

16-18. 

Paul  in,  Acts  II.,  263. 

GALATIANS,     Circumcision      of, 

Galatians,  302-315. 
Hinderers  and  troublers  of  the, 

Galatians,  316-329. 
Their    folly,    Galatians,     163- 

179. 
GALATIANS,    The     Epistle,    He- 
brews, 175. 

The  address  of,  Galatians,  3-18. 

The  Anathema,  Galatians,  34- 

52- 

and  Ephesians,  Ephesians,  3. 

The      Benediction,    Galatians, 

460,  461. 

Construction,  Galatians,  9. 

Importance  of,  Galatians,  4. 

The  salutation,  Galatians,  19- 

3,3- 

Style,  Galatians,  8. 

written  before  the  Gospels,  Acts 

I.,  114,  115. 

GALATIANS  I.,  5,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 429. 

6-9,  II.  Corinthians,  319;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  332. 


GALATIANS    I..     7,  8,     Pastoral 

Epistles,  301. 
10,   Romans,   395;  Ephesians, 

389- 

13,     Acts     II.,     26;     Pastoral 

Epistles,  55. 

14,  Isaiah  II.,  169. 

15,  16,  Acts  II.,  65,  77;  Ephe- 
sians, 26. 

16,  II.  Corinthians,  156;  Phil- 

ippians,  188. 

17,  Pastoral  Epistles,  361. 

18,  19,  James,  35. 

19,  James,  26. 

20,   Romans,  83;  James,  307. 

21,  Galatians,  no. 

23,  Peter,  87. 

GALATIANS  II.,  1-3,  Pastoral 
Epistles,  204,  361. 

3,  Acts  II.,  227. 

4,  Peter,  xiv. 

7-10,  Ephesians,  215;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  52. 

9,  Romans,  18;  James,  8,  26, 

2>S,  139;  Joh"  Epistles,  6,  7. 

10,  Leviticus,  396. 

II,  Ephesians,  113. 

11-21,  Galatians,  132. 

12,  Acts  II.,  2Z2',  James,  34. 

14,  Ephesians,  36. 

18,  James,  56. 

20,   Mark,   382;   Romans,    ii, 

368;  Ephesians,  7. 

GAL.ATIANS  III.,  i,  Pastoral 
Epistles,  301. 

2,  5,  Ephesians,  56,  59. 


134 


GA  LA  TIA  NS   III.—GA  MA  LI  EL 


GALATIANS  III.,  6,  James,  156. 

7,  14,  Ephesians,  6,  160. 

8,  Romans,  253;  Peter,  159, 

9,  John  Epistles,  285. 

10-13,  Ephesians,  7. 

II,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  140; 

Acts  II.,  20. 

12,  E.xodus,  280. 

13,  Leviticus,  229;  Ephesians, 

ZT,  James,  130. 

14,  Ephesians,  2,6,  55. 

16,  29,  E.xodus,  268. 

16-19,  Matthew,  7. 

17,  Exodus,  197;  Matthew,  70. 

19,  Numbers,  87;  Hebrews,  23, 

176. 

21,  Psalms  III.,  270. 

22,  Ephesians,  43. 

2T^,  Numbers,  ^y. 

2Z,  Leviticus,  324;  Ephesians, 

135;  Colossians,  301. 

29,  Philippians,  178. 

GALATIANS    IV.,    1-5,   Leviticus, 

564. 

3,    Exodus,    335;    Ephesians, 

113;  Colossians,  191;  He- 
brews, 176. 

4,  Ezra,  19;  Luke,  18;   Peter, 

164. 

5,  Ephesians,  31,  63. 

8,  9,  Ephesians,  269. 

9- II,  Acts  II.,  321. 

13,  Acts  II.,  265. 

14,    Acts    I.,    44;   II.,   50;   II. 

Corinthians,    352;   Ephesians, 

53- 

15,  Acts  II.,  50. 

19,  Ephesians,  253;  Peter,  330. 

21-31,  Acts  II.,  19. 

24,  25,  Jeremiah  II.,  359. 

25,   Mark,  376. 


GALATIANS  V.,  5,  6,  Ephesians, 
53. 

6,  Jeremiah  I.,  207;  Ephesians, 

436;  Thessalonians,  27. 

10,  James,   168. 

13, 14,  Deuteronomy,  250,  251 ; 

Peter,  xiv. 

14,  James,  132. 

16,  22-25,  Ephesians,  25. 

17,  Romans,  198. 

19,  20,  Exodus,  145,  233, 

20,     Pastoral    Epistles,     295, 

297;  James,  199. 

22,  2T^,  Romans,  222',  Ephe- 
sians, i^T^. 

GALATIANS  VL,  i,  Leviticus,  402. 

2,  Ezra,  258. 

7,  9,   Pastoral  Epistles,   343; 

James,  56. 

II,  Romans,  437. 

12-14,  Ephesians,  2>^. 

14,  Romans,  70;  II.  Corin- 
thians, 152;  Ephesians,  262. 

15,  Jeremiah  I.,  207;  II.  Corin- 
thians, 206. 

16,  Psalms  III.,  317;  Ephe- 
sians, 435;  Hebrews,  62; 
James,  45;  Revelation,  118. 

17,  Exodus,  340. 

GALERIUS,  Emperor,  Acts  II., 
^■??^' 

GALILEE,  Christ  appears  at  the 
Sea  of,  John  II.,  381-396. 

Christ  begins  his  ministry  in, 

Matthew,  48-56. 

The    crisis    in,   Matthew,    186- 

218;  John  I.,  222,-22^^. 

A  Sabbath  in,  Luke,  148-161. 

GALLIC,  Acts  IL,  327-329;  L 
Corinthians,  7-12. 

GAMALIEL,  Acts  L,  229-245;  II., 
13-15. 


GAMALIEL— GENESIS  XII. 


135 


GAMALIEL,    Rabbi,   Ecclcsiastes, 

GENESIS  II.,  2,  Deuteronomy,  6^. 

294. 

— -7,   Psalms  III.,    107;   Acts   I., 

GAMBLING,  Evils  of,  Joshua,  182. 

60. 

Spirit  of,  Proverbs,  2t^. 

2T^,  24,  Ephesians,  364,  376. 

GARRISON,  William  Lloyd,  perse- 

GENESIS   III.,    4,    5,    Ephesians, 

cuted,  I.  Kings,  422. 

400;  Peter,  225. 

GATE       OF      THE      TEMPLE, 

5,  Twelve  Prophets,  2^22;  John 

(Chulda),  Acts  L,  158. 

Epistles,   142. 

GATH,  The  ark  at,  I.  Samuel.  ;6. 

7,  John  Epistles,  143. 

David  at,  I.  Samuel,  336-340, 

15,  John  Epistles,  183. 

391-403;  Psalms  II.,  171. 

16,  Leviticus,  307. 

GAUTIER,  L.,  Ezekiel,  405. 

17,    18,    Leviticus,  454,   512; 

GAZA,  Acts  I.,  410. 

Luke,  374. 

Samson  in.  Judges,  zoi-^^"^^- 

19,  Psalms  III.,  7. 

GEDALIAH,   II.   Kings,  468-476; 

24,  Revelation,  -/2. 

JeremiahlL,  56,  172-186;  Eze- 

GENESIS IV.,  1-8,  John  Epistles, 

kiel,  290. 

189. 

GEHAZL   II.   Kings,   44,  47,    5^- 

3,   Hebrews,  22  t^. 

64,  ^2. 

10,  Leviticus,  142  ;  Jeremiah  I., 

GEIKIE,    Cunningham,    Acts   11., 

117. 

38,  loi,  119. 

GENESIS  v.,  3,  Leviticus,  307. 

GELASIUS  OF  CVZICUS,  James, 

24,  Psalms  11.,  III. 

422. 
GENEALOGIES,    Numbers,     t,2^\ 

GENESIS  VL,  2,  Daniel,  179. 

Pastoral  Epistles,  34,  35. 

3,  Galatians,  351;  Peter,  289. 

7,  Hebrews,  300. 

of  Chronicles,   Chronicles,   29- 

63. 

14,  Jeremiah  I.,  121. 

Teaching  of,  Chronicles,  57. 

17,  Peter,  141,   159. 

of  Matthew,  Matthew,  5. 

GENESIS  VII.,    II,   Ezekiel,  240; 

GENEROSITY    and    severity,    II. 

Peter,  338. 

Samuel,  55. 

GENESIS  VIII.,  20,  James,  159. 

and  wisdom.  Proverbs,  42-47. 

22,  Jeremiah  II.,  355. 

of  Barzillai,  II.  Samuel,  303. 

GENESIS  IX.,  6,  Mark,  329. 

GENESIS  I.,  I,  3,  Hebrews,   207; 

9,  lo,  Hebrews,  300. 

John  Epistles,  82,  183. 

II,  Peter,  33S. 

2,  John  Epistles,  184. 

GENESIS  X.,  10,  II.   Kings,   315. 

4,  Jeremiah  I.,  203. 

12,   Twelve  Prophets  II.,  540. 

9,  Jeremiah  1.,  121. 

GENESIS  XL,   I  9.  IL  Kings,  315. 

II,  12,  John  Epistles,  183. 

7,  Psalms  III.,  421. 

1 6,  Revelation,  198. 

GENESIS    XII.,    2,    Jeremiah    I., 

2-j,  Ephesians,  117. 

175;   Matthew,   62,   70;  Gala- 

 31,  John  Epistles,  138. 

tians,  183. 

136 


GENESIS  X/L— GENESIS  XXXV. 


GENESIS  XII.,  3,  Jeremiah  I.,  132. 

6,  7,  Joshua,  205. 

GENESIS  XIIL,  10,  Joshua,  96. 

GENESIS  XIV.,  7,  Joshua,  25. 

14,  15,  Joshua,  240;  Jeremiah 

I.,  88. 

GENESIS  XV.,  I,  Songs  of  Solo- 
mon, 261. 

4-6,  James,  158. 

6,   Psalms  III.,  148;  Romans, 

109;  Galatians,  185. 

8,  Ephesians,  50. 

17,  Psalms  III.,  368. 

18,  Revelation,  150. 

19,  Joshua,  262,. 

GENESIS  XVI.,  12,  Psalms  III., 
161. 

13,  Ezra,  ?>7',  John  I.,  4. 

GENESIS XVII.,  7,  Galatians,  203. 

10-14,  Leviticus,  315. 

13,  Leviticus,  317. 

18,  Galatians,  29. 

22,  John  I.,  4. 

2y26,  Galatians,  292. 

GENESIS XVIII.,  2,  Hebrews,  316. 

10,  II,  Romans,  249, 

12,  Peter,  113. 

17,  James,  161. 

25,  Songs  of  Solomon,  216. 

GENESIS  XIX.,  I,  Hebrews,  316. 

. II,  Jeremiah  I.,  191. 

16,  17,  James,  460. 

24,  Pastoral  Epistles.  325. 

GENESIS  XX.,  7,  Psalms  III.,  131. 

GENESIS  XXL,  9,  Galatians,  293. 

12,  Romans,  249. 

19,  Jeremiah  L,  85. 

GENESIS  XXIL,  2,  Peter,  84. 

8,    Galatians,    201 ;    Hebrews, 

227. 

16,   Psalms   III.,    130;  Tames, 

158. 


GENESIS  XXIL,    18,   Psalms  IL, 

316,  317;  Hebrews,  287. 
GENESIS  XXIIL,    4,    Chronicles, 

317- 

8,  Jeremiah  I.,  8. 

GENESIS  XXIV.,  7,  Daniel,  180. 

26,  Daniel,  226. 

42,  Jeremiah  I.,  8. 

53,  Peter,  iii. 

GENESIS  XXV.,    13,  Jeremiah  L, 

205. 

2T„  Romans,  250. 

29,  Jeremiah  I.,  192. 

32,  Hebrews,  287. 

GENESIS  XXVL,   3,  .Psalms  III., 

130. 

4,  Psalms  II. ,  316,  317. 

28,  Peter,  Sj. 

GENESIS  XXVIL,  28,  39,  Ezekiel, 

328. 

36,  Hebrews,  288. 

41,  John  Epistles,  183. 

GENESIS    XXVIIL,    11-14,    John 

Epistles,  201. 

16,  Ezra,  207. 

18,  Leviticus,  203. 

GENESIS  XXIX.,  26,  Jeremiah  L, 

121. 
GENESIS  XXX.,  14,  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 20. 
GENESIS      XXXL,      30,      Twelve 

Prophets  II. ,  59. 

35,  Peter,  113. 

42,  53,  Jeremiah  I.,  22S. 

GENESIS  XXXIL,  28,  Chronicles, 

315 ;  Romans,  247. 
GENESIS    XXXIV.,     25,    Joshua, 

117,  341- 

30,  Psalms  III..  130. 

GENESIS    XXXV.,    8,    I.   Samuel, 

149. 


GENESIS  XXX  VI.—GIBEONITES 


137 


GENKSISXXXVL,  12,  Joshua,  25. 

GENESIS  XXXVII.,  22-24,  Jere- 
miah II.,  164. 

GENESIS  XXXVIII.,  14,  Jeremiah 
I..  107. 

18,  II.  Corinthians,  55. 

24,  Ezekiel,   134. 

26^  Isaiah  II.,  217. 

2^,  Jeremiah  I.,  342. 

GENESIS  XXXIX.,  6,  Twelve 
Prophets  I.,  2>^2. 

GENESIS  XLI.,  34,  Jeremiah  I., 
72,  121. 

42,  Daniel,  210. 

45,  Joshua,  22. 

51,  II.  Kings,  318. 

GENESIS  XLII.,  19,  Jeremiah  I., 

GENESIS  XLIIL,  8,  I.  Kings,  125. 

30,  Peter,  121. 

GENESIS  XLV.,  18,  20,  21,  Jere- 
miah I.,   ?i2. 

GENESIS  XLVI.,  2,  Hebrews,  254. 

2j,  Acts  I.,  310. 

34,  Jeremiah  I.,  274. 

GENESIS  XLVII.,  31,  Hebrews, 
260. 

GENESIS  XLVIIL,  5,  Joshua,  300. 

14,  Deuteronomy,  468. 

19,  Joshua,  300. 

GENESIS  XLIX.,,  5,  Numbers,  330. 

9,  Psalms  I.,  159;  Revelation, 

10,  Ezekiel.  169;  Luke,  91. 

22,  Psalms  II.,  410,  412. 

24,  Psalms  II.,  406;  Jeremiah 

II.,  100. 
GENEVAN      VERSION,      James. 

Z7^>  454- 
GENITIVE,  Characterizing, 

James,  98,  108,  122,  447. 


GENIUS,     Aberrations    of,     John 

Epistles,  263. 
GENTILES,  Numbers,  266. 

Conversion    of  the,    Acts    II., 

142-163. 
Ignorance    of,    Thessalonians, 

296. 

Jew  and,  Ephesians,  1 31-142. 

Walk   of  the,   Ephesians,   261- 

274. 
GENTLEMAN      defined,     James, 

202. 
GEORGIUS  SYNCELLUS,  James, 

410,  438. 
GERIZIM,  Ebal  and,  Joshua,  201. 
GERMAN    SCHOLARSHIP,    Acts 

IL,  386. 

unpractical.  Acts  I.,  12. 

GERSHONITES,  Numbers,  44. 

Cities  of  the,  Joshua,  350. 

GESHUR   in    Syria,    Absalom   m, 

II.  Samuel,  205. 
GESHURITES,  The.  Joshua,  255, 

256. 
GESSIUS       FLORUS,       Pastoral 

Epistles,  2y6. 
GETHSEMANE,    Christ    in,   Mat- 
thew,    398-403;    Mark,    389- 

401;  Luke,  Z(^A-T)7^;  John  II., 

263-270. 
GEZER,  I.  Kings,  136. 
GIBBON,  Edward,  Isaiah  I.,  361, 

362;    Jeremiah    II.,    67;  Acts 

I.,  57;  II.,  150,  158,  273;  John 

Epistles,  84. 

and  Christianity,  Joshua,  4. 

GIBEAH,    The    crime  of.  Judges, 

34«-349- 

of  Saul.  I.  Samuel,  149. 

GIBEONITES,  The,  and  David,  II. 

Samuel,  331. 


138 


GIBEONITES—GLOR  YING 


GIBEONITES,  attacked  by  Adon- 

GILBOA,  Saul  defeated  at,  I.  Sam- 

izedek, Joshua,  224. 

uel,  414,  429-440. 

Stratagem    of,    Joshua,     211- 

GILEAD,  Judges,  224-226. 

222. 

GILGAL,  Elisha  at,  II.  Kings,  48. 

GIBSON,   J.    Monro,     Revelation, 

kingdom    renewed,   I.   Samuel, 

127. 

179. 

GIDEON  and  the  angel  of  Jeho- 

 The  name,  Joshua,  120. 

vah,  Judges,  145-148. 

Samuel  and  Saul   at,   I.   Sam- 

 defeats  the  Midianites,  Judges, 

uel,  205-216. 

178-194. 

GINSBURG,  Christian  D.,  Ecclesi- 

Death  of,  Judges,  209. 

astes,  "jTi,  99,    103,    108,    no. 

the  Ecclesiastic,   Judges,    195- 

162,  264. 

208. 

GIRLS  saved  alive.  Numbers,  366. 

Faith  of,  Hebrews,  251;  Peter, 

GISCHALA,  Acts  II.,  4^  6. 

31- 

GIVING,  Fruits  of,  II.  Corinthians, 

iconoclast        and       reformer, 

274-288. 

Judges,  150-163. 

Grace  of,  II.  Corinthians,  262- 

threshing,  Judges,  144. 

^72>- 

GIESBRECHT,    Friedrich,   Isaiah 

The  term,  John  I.,  388. 

II.,  210;  Jeremiah  II.,  30,  72>'> 

See  CHARITY. 

166,  204,  206,  214,  225,  231, 

GLADIATORS,   Paul's  use  of  the 

240,  250,  261,  2yz,  285,  288, 

figure  of,  I.  Corinthians,  106. 

315,  319.  2^^^^  T^i-^,  Z2s2>  Z2>'^', 

Shows    of.    Pastoral    Epistles, 

Twelve  Prophets  I.,   T^yz. 

179.  347- 

GIFFORD,     Archdeacon     E.    H., 

GLOOM,    a    characteristic  of  his- 

John Epistles,  22. 

tory,  I.  Kings,  42. 

GIFT  OF  TONGUES,  Acts  I.,  97- 

of  a  tortured  soul,  Psalms  I., 

106;  I.  Corinthians,  314-317. 

376,  2,77- 

Gil- IS  and  sacrifices,  Philippians, 

GLORIA,  The,  of  the  angels,  Luke, 

253-368. 

71-73. 

Attaining  the  best,   I.   Kings, 

GLORY  and  holiness,  Isaiah  I.,  68. 

124. 

Grace  and,  Psalms  II.,  449. 

Concerning  spiritual,  I.  Corin- 

 of   Christ   analysed,   Hebrews, 

thians,  273-291. 

38-46. 

Nemesis  of  neglected.  Pastoral 

of  the  Son,  Colossians,  70-84. 

Epistles,  309-318. 

of  the    transfiguration,     Mat- 

 of  God,  Peter,  171. 

thew,   2T,y2J,2. 

Spiritual,   and  public  worship, 

Suffering    and,   Thessalonians, 

I.  Corinthians,  309-324. 

289-304. 

to  be  proportionate.  Numbers, 

GLORYING,  False  and  true,  Gala- 

181. 

tians,  421-434. 

GNOSTICISM— GOD 


139 


GNOSTICISM,  Acts  II.,  420;  Ro- 
mans, 432;  Ephcsians,  279; 
Colossians,  236;  Hebrews,  22\ 
James,  389;  Peter,  2?>?i\  John 
Epistles,  4,   16.  43. 

its    moral    teaching.   Pastoral 

Epistles,  44,  53,  151. 

its  problem,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 38. 

its    rapid    progress,     Pastoral 

Epistles,  2^"/. 

Jewish,   Pastoral  Epistles,   t^t^, 

34. 
GOB,  II.  Samuel,  341. 
GOD,  The  absence  of,   I.   Samuel, 

71- 

Almighty,  Genesis,  161. 

alone  to  be  worshiped,  Exo- 
dus, 289-294. 

an  evil.  Song  of  Solomon,  218- 

229. 

and  history,  Isaiah  II.,  87, 100, 

io6,  157. 

and  holiness,  Genesis,  66. 

and  nature,  Job,  301. 

and  the  idols,  Isaiah  II.,  153. 

Anthropomorphism,      Genesis, 

60. 

as  an  enemy.  Song  ofSolomon, 

132-143- 
an     argument    from    history, 

Isaiah  II.,  106-131. 

as  a  lion,  Isaiah  I.,  242-245. 

as    a    motherbird,    Isaiah    I., 

245-247. 
as  a  potter,  Jeremiah  I.,  2>77' 

397- 
bearing    our    sins,    Isaiah   II., 

177-188. 
Belief  in   the  call   of,    Genesis, 

91. 


GOD,  bountifulness,  Joshua,  54. 

cares,  Joshua,   103. 

cares    for    all   things,   Genesis, 

10. 

Compassion  of,  Numbers,  213. 

a    consuming    fire,    Isaiah    I., 

331-342;  Hebrews,  309. 

Dependence  upon,  Deuter- 
onomy, 226. 

Difllculty     of    right    thinking 

about.  Genesis,  182. 

faithful  to  Abraham,  Genesis, 

105. 

Goodness  of.  Job,  53. 

governed,  Joshua,  414-416. 

has  an  interest  in  men,  Joshua, 

286. 

His  existence.  Proverbs,  391. 

Holiness  of,  I.  Samuel,  27. 

honors  those  who  honor  him, 

I.  Samuel,  440. 

Husbandry  and  building  of,  I. 

Corinthians,  81-96. 

in    history,    I.    Kings,    39-45; 

Exodus,  6-13;  Deuteronomy, 
50. 

In  the  thought  of,  Ezra,   349. 

is  love.  Exodus,  61;  Isaiah  I., 

12. 

is  not  slack,  Peter,  345-354. 

.\  jealous.  Exodus,  298;  Leviti- 
cus, 240. 

the  judge,  Psalms  I.,  15,  i6. 

Justice  of,  I.  Samuel,  29. 

Knowledge  of,   I.  Samuel,  28; 

'Twelve  Prophets  I.,  318-342. 

knows  how  to   deliver,   Peter, 

283-297. 

Laughter  of.  Psalms  I.,  15,  16. 

link  of  the  generations,  Num- 
bers, 2^26. 


140                                           GOD- 

-GOD 

GOD,  The  living,  I.  Samuel,  64. 

GOD,  Righteousness  of,  Isaiah  II., 

Luther  defines,  Exodus,  292. 

224-229. 

manifesting  himself  to  persons, 

a  rock.  Psalms  II.,  219. 

Genesis,  12. 

., — a    sacrament,    Isaiah    II.,   S7- 

Meeting,  Genesis,  155. 

105. 

men  need  Him,  Proverbs,  43. 

the  Saviour,  Isaiah  II.,  136. 

Modern    doubt    of,    Numbers, 

the   Saviour  of  men,  Genesis, 

163. 

106. 

Moses  and  the  vision  of,  Exo- 

 Saving    knowledge    of,    Peter, 

dus,  437-439- 

235-244- 

Name  of,  Exodus,  54-65;  Dan- 

 seems  to  persecute,  Job,  176, 

iel,  65. 
Nearness  of,  Genesis,  145,  284; 

,    204. 

seen  in  Christ,  John   II.,    135- 

156. 

Ezra,  82. 

Sole    allegiance   to,    Numbers, 

no  despot,  Job,  149. 

274-279- 
The  Son  is,  Hebrews,  2y. 

not  confined  to  places,  Judges, 

ZZ7- 

the   source    of  wisdom,   Prov- 

 not  impassive,  Exodus,  60. 

not    a    mechanism,    Hebrews, 

erbs,  18. 

209. 

speaking,  Jeremiah  I.,  303. 

omnipresent.  Genesis,  155. 

Spirituality  of,  Jewish  concep- 

 omnipotence,   Isaiah  H.,    121, 

tion,  Isaiah  II.,  137. 

390. 

still  speaks  to  men,  Ezra,  113. 

our  refuge,   Song  of  Solomon, 

Strength  of,  I.  Samuel,  22>. 

346. 

Sufficient  inducement  to  obey, 

Passion    of,    Isaiah    II.,    106- 

Genesis,  89. 

131- 

the  supreme  intelligence,  Gene- 

 Personality  of,  Isaiah  II.,  148. 

sis,  10. 

Preparation   for  the  work  of, 

sustains.  Exodus,  99. 

Joshua,  100. 

temple     in    humanity,    Ephe- 

present  with  all  that  is.  Gene- 

sians, 143-154. 

sis,  12. 

The  Theophany,  I.  Kings,  431- 

Providence  of.  Genesis,  139. 

444- 

Purposes,  I.  Samuel,  130. 

Treatment    of  His    saints,    I. 

Reasoning        together       with, 

Samuel,  34. 

Isaiah  I.,  5-7. 

true  to  His  word,  Joshua,  no. 

Rejection  of,  I.  Samuel,  159. 

- — Unity  of,  I.  Samuel,  28;  Mark, 

relation  with  human  life.  Prov- 

338.     • 

erbs,  47,  155,  197,    199,   2\y, 

Vengeance  of.  Twelve  Prophets 

236,  252,  291,  353. 

II.,  90-95. 

The    reserve  of,   Genesis,   307- 

What  it  is  to  see.  Exodus,  370. 

309. 

Wisdom  of,  Isaiah  I.,  238-242. 

COD  AND   THE  WORLD— GOODNESS 


1?1 


GOD  AND  THE  WORLD,  Genesis, 
I ;  I.  Kings.  444. 

GODEFROY,  Pierre,  Comment  on 
Theodos.  Cod.  Acts  II.,  2T2i' 

GDDET,  F.,  I.  Corinthians,  70, 
149,280;  II.  Corinthians,  240, 
345»  2i7y^  Thessalonians,  43; 
Pastoral  Epistles,  34. 

GODLINESS,  Peter,  248. 

GODLY,  Psalms,  33. 

living  and  its  results,  Psalms 

I.,  109. 

GOD'S  METHOD  harmonious, 
Genesis,  5. 

illustrated  in  Noah's  life.  Gene- 
sis, 69. 

may    involve    delay.    Genesis, 

148. 

of  revealing  Himself,   Genesis, 

399;  Exodus,  102. 

of  teaching  by  picture,  Gene- 
sis, 7. 

to  employ  means.  Exodus,  34. 

to  illuminate,  not  coerce,  Exo- 
dus, 203,  204. 

with    Abraham    new,    Genesis, 

82. 

GOEL,  Leviticus,  514;  Numbers, 
55,  400;  Joshua,  329,  330; 
Judges,  398;  Job,  234;  Psalms 
II.,  126,  351- 

GOETHE.  Johann  Wolfgang  von, 
Colossians,  298;  Pastoral 
Epistles,  79. 

Faust,  Ecclesiastes,  133. 

on  the  children  of  Israel,  Exo- 
dus, 5. 

on    the   dissemination    of  the 

Bible,  I.  Kings,  9. 

on  self-development,  Deuter- 
onomy, 113. 


GOETHE,  on  the  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, Song  of  Solomon,  24. 

Sadness  of,  Ecclesiastes.   130. 

GOG,  Ezekiel,  369-376;  Revela- 
tion, 338. 

GOLDEN  AGES  of  the  church, 
Pastoral  Epistles,  264. 

GOLDEN  CALF,  The,  Exodus, 
431-433;  Joshua,  31;  Psalms 
HI.,  145. 

at  Dan,  II.  Kings,  494,  495. 

GOLDEN  CANDLESTICK,  Exo- 
dus,   2i^2,    T,?^T,. 

GOLDEN  GATE,  Acts  I.,  158. 

GOLDEN-MAN,  The,  Ecclesiastes, 
218. 

GOLDSMITH,  Oliver,  Song  of  Sol- 
omon, 14,  48. 

GOLIATH,  David  and,  I.  Samuel, 
278-291. 

GOOD,  The  chief,  Ecclesiastes,  2y- 
32,  113-126,  276-335. 

in  devotion  to  business,  Eccles- 
iastes, 142-186,  237. 

in  pleasure,   Ecclesiastes,  133- 

141,  234-237. 

in    wealth,    Ecclesiastes,     187- 

228. 

in    wisdom,   Ecclesiastes,    127- 

133,  230-234. 

in  the  wise  use  of  life,  Ecclesi- 
astes, 229-275. 

invincible.  Judges,  115. 

preferred,  Psalms  I.,   116. 

produces      unexpected     good, 

Colossians,  445. 

Survival      of,      Exodus,     301; 

Judges,  55. 

GOODNESS,  Proverbs,  149-169; 
Philippians,  339. 

has      one    source,     Ephesians, 

325-328. 


142 


GOODNESS— GREA  TNESS 


GOODNESS,  not  apart  from  God, 
Jeremiah  I.,  173. 

of  God  unfailing.  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 194-205. 

GOSPEL,  Isaiah  II.,  435-441, 

Apparent  failure  of  the,  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  402. 

as  a  Gospel  of  witness,   John 

Epistles,  236-240. 

and  law,  Exodus,  302. 

bears   a  fixed  character,  Gala- 

tians,   Ti?>. 

defined,   II.   Corinthians,    144- 

156. 

Faith    in    the,    Thessalonians, 

403,  404. 

Freedom  of  the,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 362,  363. 

Light  of  the.  Numbers,  %2. 

Meaning  of,  Romans,  12. 

Motives    for   adhering  to   the, 

Colossians,  111-115. 

Need  for  the,  Romans,  38-47. 

of  liberty,  Luke,  142-147. 

of  life,  Luke,  137-142. 

of  love,  Luke,  134-137. 

of  Paul  from  Christ,  Galatians, 

53-67- 

Slow  progress  of.  Acts  II.,  269. 

Standing  orders  of  the,  Thes- 
salonians, 217-232. 

Truth  and  worth  of  the,  Colos- 
sians, 27-35. 

GOULBURN,  Dean  Edward  M., 
Acts  I.,  4^4;  II.,  121. 

GOVERNMENT  and  pious  rulers, 
Chronicles,  2>7^-2>7-- 

GRACE  and  glory,  Psalms  II., 
449. 

and    peace,     Ephesians,     435; 

Phihppians,  15,  16. 


GRACE,  Bestowmcnt  of,  Ephe- 
sians, 34-49;  Colossians,  427- 

431- 

Meaning  of,  Romans,  22;  Gala- 
tians, 19;  Colossians,  412- 
414. 

of  God    received    in    vain,    II. 

Corinthians,  225. 

a  Pauline  word,  Thessa- 
lonians, 399. 

Paul's  conception  of,  Gala- 
tians, 148. 

Proclamation  of,  Isaiah  II.,  y^, 

290. 

Work    of   saving,   Philippians, 

25;  Colossians,  17-20;  Thes- 
salonians, 15-17,  2y?i,  279. 

GRACES,  Christian  and  Greek 
compared,  Thessalonians,  25, 
26. 

GRAF-WELLSHAUSEN  THE- 
ORY,  Leviticus,  533. 

GRAMMATICAL  ERRORS  IN 
SCRIPTURE,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 394. 

GRATITUDE  and  trust.  Exodus, 
219. 

GRATZ,  H.,  Psalms  I.,  21,  52, 
94,  2>^y,  II.,  j^i,  230,  360, 
480;  III.,  145,  164,  213,  223, 
372,  391,  407,  409,414,421; 
Jeremiah  II.,  176;  Twelve 
Prophets  I.,  176,  211;  IL, 
352. 

GRAY,  Asa,  Matthew,  167. 

GREATNESS  and  stifled  afifec- 
tions,  Exodus,  79. 

finds  colleagues.  Exodus,  255. 

Law  of,  Mark,  292-294. 

Radical     elements    the    same, 

Genesis,  91. 


greek:— G  W  YNN 


143 


GRKF'K  use  of  tlu>  Article,  Romans 

VIII.;    Pastoral    Kpistles,    89, 

189,  39-'. 
words  in    the   book   of  Daniel, 

Daniel,   t^t,,  51. 
GREEK  CHURCH,  Absolution  in 

the,  James,  343. 
GREEK      TRAGEDY,      Numbers, 

2.  3. 
GREEKS   at   the  feast,   John   H., 

31. 

Coming  of  the.  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  463-466. 

God's  human,  Hebrews,  21. 

Israel  and  the,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  439-446. 

Slaughter  of  the,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  467-469. 

GREGG,  W.  R.,  Proverbs,  73. 

GREGORY  THE  GREAT,  Song  of 
Solomon,  43;  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles,  231,   2T^2. 

GREGORY  NAZIANZEN,  James, 
26S;  John  Epistles,  116. 


GREGORY  OF  TOURS,  Pastoral 
Epistles,  233. 

GRfEF  before  God,  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 242-252. 

Christian  attitude  towards,  II. 

Samuel,  2S5. 

for  the  dead,  sacred,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 280. 

GROTIUS,  Hugo,  John  Epistles,98. 

GUHL,  E.  Ephesiaca,  Acts  II., 
356,  362,  2i(i7- 

GUILE,  Peter,  6^. 

GUILT,  its  debt  extinguished,  Song 
of  Solomon,  300-310. 

Jewish  responsibility  and,  Ro- 
mans, 67-77. 

Universal,  Romans,  56-66. 

GUILT-OFFERING,  Leviticus, 
155-174- 

GUINNESS,  H.  G.,  The  approach- 
ing end  of  the  age,  Revelation, 
294. 

GUYON,   Madame,   Acts  II.,  446; 

Romans,  334. 
GWYNN,  Dr.  George  J.,  Acts  I.,  2. 


144 


HA  BA  KK  UK— HA  NNA  H 


H 


HABAKKUK,    the  Book,  Twelve 

Prophets    II.,    113-159;    Acts 

II.,  20. 
HABAKKUK  I.,  5,  Acts  II.,  208. 

5-10,  Revelation,  152, 

d-^,  Ecclesiastes,  42 ;  Jeremiah 

II.,  301 ;  Daniel,  49. 
7,    8,    II.    Kings,    424;    Gala- 

tians,  217. 

8,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  371. 

II,  14-16,  Exodus,  293. 

12,    Ecclesiastes,     120;    Gala- 

tians,  186. 
HABAKKUK  II.,  1-19,  II.  Kings, 

383. 

2,  Galatians,  217. 

3,  Joshua,  361;  Job,  270. 

4,  Acts  II.,  20;  Galatians,  185, 

191. 

9-1 1,  II.  Kings,  418. 

HABAKKUK  III.,  Psalms  II.,  2>72- 

1,  Psalms  I.,  58. 

3,     7,    Numbers,    384;    Peter, 

348. 

10-15,  Psalms  II.,  381. 

17,   Jeremiah  I.,    180;   Philip- 

pians,  2i'^6. 
HABIT,  Aristotle  on,  Hebrews,  85. 

evil,  Hebrews,  91. 

HADAD,  King  of  Edom,  I.  Kings, 

251-253- 
HADADEZAR  defeated  by  David, 

II.  Samuel,  i,  4,  154. 
HADES,  Christ  in,  Hebrews,  170. 
HADRIAN,  Emperor,  Acts  I.,  66; 

II.,  306;  Pastoral  Epistles,  89. 


HAGAR,  Genesis,  147  sq.;  Gala- 
tians, 286-301. 

flees,  Genesis,  153. 

talks  with  God,  Genesis,  155, 

218. 

HAGGAI,  The  Book,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets IL,  223-252;  Hebrews,  306. 

HAGGAI  I.,  I,  Ezra,  75,  yy. 

5,  7,  Ezra,  ^6. 

HAGGAI  II.,  I,  Ezra,  ^6. 

6-8,  Ezra,  29;  Daniel,  11 ;  He- 
brews,  2i'^T,  Revelation,  105. 

7,  Daniel,  108;  Ephesians,  93. 

9,  Ezra,  75,  "jd. 

12-14,  Ezekiel,  437. 

20-23,  Daniel,  108. 

23,  Chronicles,  144. 

HAIL,  The  plague  of,  Exodus, 
146-153. 

HALL,  S.  C,  Acts  I.,  5. 

HAM,  Son  of  Noah,  Genesis,  y^. 

HAMAN,  Ezra,  371-381,  396,  399- 

HAMATH,  Isaiah  I.,  94. 

HANAMEEL,  Jeremiah  II.,  310. 

HANANIAH,  the  prophet,  Deute- 
ronomy, 350;  Jeremiah  II., 
115-130. 

HANDS  lifted  in  prayer.  Pastoral 
Epistles,  97,  98. 

HANNAH,  Faith  rewarded,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 14-25. 

Song  of  Thanksgiving,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 25-36. 

Trial  and  trust  of,  I.   Samuel, 

1-13. 

Vow  of,  I.  Samuel,  10. 


HA  NNING  TON—HEBRE  WS  I. 


14;' 


HANNINGTON,  Bishop  James, 
Thessalonians,  47. 

HANUN,  David  and.  II.  Samuel. 
146-157. 

HAPPINESS  and  pain,  Job,  55. 

Sourceof.  John  I.,  140;  II.,  41. 

HARDENING  OF  HEART,  Exo- 
dus,   n  3-1 21;     Deuteronomy, 

59- 

HARDY,  Nathaniel,  John  Epis- 
tles, 98,  99,  115,  116,  162, 
176,  177,  178. 

HARETH,    David    at,   I.   Samuel, 

344- 
HARLESS,  G.   C.   A.   von,    Ephe- 

sians,  125,  293. 
HARNACK,  Adolf,  Acts  I.,  xxi.; 

James,  20,  t^jo. 
HAROUN   ALRASCHID,    Ecclesi- 

astes,  128. 
HARPER,  Jesuit,  James,  385. 
HARRIS,  J.  Rendal,  Acts  I.,   vii., 

viii.,  418;  n.,  321. 
HARVEST    and    vintage    of  the 

world,  Revelation,  245-258. 
H.ASTE,  Misery  from,  Joshua,  2i72- 
HATCH,      Dr.      Edwin,      Thessa- 
lonians, 239;  James,  146,  256, 

399- 

on  Episcopacy,  .Acts  II.,  416. 

on  primitive  discipline,  Thes- 
salonians, 206,  207. 

HAUGHTINESS,  Proverbs,  89. 

HAURAN,  Job,  20. 

HAUSR.ATH,  A.,  II.  Corinthians, 
290;  Pastoral  Epistles,  9,  407. 

H.\ZAEL  and  Elisha,  II.  Kings, 
90-98. 

dies,  II.  Kings,  182, 

smites  Israel,  II.  Kings,   141. 

H.\ZOR  destroyed,  Joshua,  243. 


HAZOR,  Jabin,  king  of,  Joshua, 
236,   238. 

Kedar  and,  Jeremiah  II.,  251- 

254- 

HEALTH  the  result  of  wisdom, 
Proverbs,  39. 

HE.ARING  and  doing,  James,  99- 
105. 

HEAVE-OFFERING,  Numbers, 
184. 

HE.WEN,  Proverbs,  59,  162,  274; 
Song  of  Solomon,  335-346; 
Isaiah  I.,  184;  Philippians, 
299-316. 

a  city,  Hebrews,  218. 

Inheritance  in,  Peter,  17-28. 

The  new  Jerusalem,  Revela- 
tion, 360,  374. 

no  fable.  Numbers,  155. 

Purification  of,  Hebrews,  163. 

a  sanctuary,  Hebrews,  70. 

HEBER  THE  KENITE,  Judges, 
24. 

HEBREW  POETRY,  Isaiah  I., 
411;  II.,  340. 

Elegies,  Song  of  Solomon,  6y 

74- 

Gnomic  school  of,  Ecclesiastes, 

20. 

HEBREWS,  The  Epistle,  Analy- 
sis, Hebrews,  ix.-xi. 

Closing  exhortations,  He- 
brews, 315-329- 

HEBREWS  I.,  I,  Ezra,  113;  Ro- 
mans, 305. 

— *-2,  Peter,  164;  Ephesians,  45. 

3,  James,  204;  Peter,  145. 

5,  II.  Samuel,  107. 

6,  Luke,  70. 

7,  I.  Kings,  432. 

10,  Peter,  22?>. 


146 


HEBREWS  I.— HEBREWS  IX. 


HEBREWS   I.,  13,  Ephesians,  91; 

HEBREWS  VI.,   2,  Acts  I.,  384; 

James,  446. 

Pastoral  Epistles,  315. 

14,  Ephesians,  402, 

4-6,  Mark,  97;  Acts  I.,  384. 

HEBREWS  H.,    i,   Romans,  256; 

7,  Mark,  no. 

Galatians,  12. 

10,  Psalms  HI.,  279. 

2-4,  Galatians,  218 

14,  Romans,  122. 

3,  4,  Galatians,  170. 

17,  Galatians,  201. 

5,    10,   Ephesians,  91;  Revela- 

 18,  Joshua,  z^y. 

tion,  ^2^. 

19,  20,  Ephesians,  408. 

8,  Ephesians,  47. 

HEBREWS  VII.,  1-4,  Exodus,  408. 

9,   Galatians,  149;  Ephesians, 

14,   Exodus,  408;   Chronicles, 

368,  370. 

305. 

10,    Song    of  Solomon,    321; 

26,  Peter,  20. 

Peter,  145;  Revelation,  39. 

27,  Leviticus,  212. 

12,  Ephesians,  208. 

2^,  Leviticus,  212. 

13,  Matthew,  225. 

HEBREWS  VIII.,  I,  Mark,  446. 

14,    Ephesians,    400;     Revela- 

 3,  Pastoral  Epistles,  219. 

tion,  208,  222. 

5,  Exodus,  385;  Leviticus,  2y, 

16,  Romans,  305. 

Ephesians,  89. 

18,   Exodus,    355;    Leviticus, 

6,    Leviticus,    198;  Galatians, 

436;    Song  of  Solomon,  201. 

218. 

HEBREWS  HI.,  i,  Peter,  122. 

8-13,  Galatians,  443. 

HEBREWS  IV.,  Leviticus,  455. 

HEBREWS  IX.,  I,  Galatians,  246. 

2,  Peter,  143,  i59- 

4,  Exodus,  2>77^  418. 

8,  Joshua,  2i^. 

5,  Exodus,  379. 

9,   Leviticus,  473,   514;  Song 

8,  9,  Leviticus,  259,  260;  Eze- 

of   Solomon,    296;   Galatians, 

kiel,  420. 

Z^2>- 

10,    Jeremiah  II.,   359;   Gala- 

 12,  Ephesians,  421 ;  Peter,  58, 

tians,  219. 

60. 

II,   Leviticus,    187,    189,   198, 

14,  Leviticus,  187,  189. 

^'72>- 

18,  Song  of  Solomon,  201. 

14,  Luke,  381;  Ephesians,  370; 

HEBREWS  v.,    I,   Pastoral  Epis- 

John   Epistles,     114;    Revela- 

tles, 219. 

tion,  244. 

4,  Leviticus,  183. 

15,  Galatians,  218;  Epliesians, 

7,  Mark,  354. 

61. 

8,  9,   Song  of  Solomon,    184; 

16-18,  Galatians,  200. 

Galatians,  250;  Peter,  145. 

22,  Leviticus,  139. 

9,  Peter,  140. 

23-26,      Leviticus,      22,,     189; 

1 1-14,  Ephesians,  253. 

Ephesians,  89. 

14,  Philippians,  269. 

24,  Leviticus,  187. 

HEBREWS  IX.— HEBREWS  XI I. 


147 


HEBREWS     IX.,     26,     Leviticus, 

HEBREWS  XL,  11,  12,  Galatians, 

2-j2\  Galatians,  30;  Ephesians, 

206,  294. 

45;  Peter,  164. 

12,  Daniel,  102. 

2y,  John  Epistles,  214. 

14,  Genesis,  235. 

2^,    Leviticus,   2-jTi,   512;   Ro- 

 16,  Ephesians,  89. 

mans,   314. 

I7-I9>        Genesis,        198-21 1; 

HEBREWS    X.,    1-18,    Galatians, 

James,  156. 

226. 

20,  Genesis,  268. 

4,  II,  L  Kings,  216. 

22,  Peter,  261. 

5-10,  Leviticus,  56,  120,  213; 

24,  25,  Exodus,  85. 

Psalms  n.,  24. 

26,  Exodus,  35. 

5-22,  Ephesians,  370. 

27,  Exodus,  369. 

8,  Romans,  211. 

29,  Exodus,  214. 

9,  Leviticus,  154. 

30,  Joshua,  138. 

10,  Leviticus,  216,  272. 

31,  James,  20,  163. 

II,  Leviticus,  185. 

2>2^  Judges,  57. 

12,  Exodus,  408. 

35,  IL  Kings,  201. 

12,  13,  Galatians,  30. 

T,-j,  Jeremiah  L,  54. 

19,    20,    Leviticus,    187,    188, 

40,  Pastoral  Epistles,  327. 

214;  Ephesians,  369. 

HEBREWS  XIL,  i.  Pastoral  Epis- 

 20,  Exodus,  376;  Mark,  t^-^6. 

tles,  328. 

22,  Peter,  T2i- 

3,  Matthew,  158. 

2Ti,  Pastoral  Epistles,  287. 

5,    II,    Ephesians,    385;   Pas- 

 26-29,    Leviticus,    103;   Peter, 

toral  Epistles,  75. 

238. 

10-13,  Mark,  423. 

25,  Peter,  2i2>^. 

13,  Chronicles,  306. 

26-31,  Mark,  97. 

14,  Ezekiel,  420. 

2-j,  Leviticus,  559;   IL   Kings, 

16,  Twelve  Prophets  II. ,  iSi, 

18. 

350. 

31,  Romans,  39. 

18,  Revelation,  265. 

2i7i    38,  Twelve  Prophets  IL, 

18-25,      Exodus,     278;    Gala- 

141;   Peter,    163;   Revelation, 

tians,  294;  Peter,  13. 

341. 

21,    Exodus,     275,    331;    II. , 

26,  Peter,  240. 

Corinthians,  304. 

2t^,  Galatians,  186. 

22,  Galatians,  295;  Ephesians, 

39,  Ephesians,  60;  Revelation, 

89;  Revelation,  128,  241,  370. 

102. 

24,  Leviticus,  141;  Galatians, 

HEBREWS  XL,  3,  Peter,  228. 

218. 

4,  Genesis,  39. 

25,    Pastoral    Epistles,    303; 

5,  Genesis,  53. 

Revelation,  105. 

8,  Genesis,  89. 

26,  27,  Revelation,  195. 

148 


HEBREWS  XII.—HERMAS 


HEBREWS    XII.,     27,     Song    of 

Solomon,  Ty^il- 

2^,  29,  Revelation,  69,  105. 

29,    Song    of  Solomon,    143, 

272;  Romans,  39. 
HEBREWS  XIII.,  I,  Peter,  56. 

2,  John  Epistles,  293. 

7,  James,  36. 

8,  Revelation,  2. 

9,  Daniel,  165. 

II,  1 2,  Exodus,  413;  Leviticus, 

148. 

12,  Ephesians,  370. 

13,  II.  Corinthians,  13;  Gala- 

tians,  297. 
16,  I.  Kings,  216;  Philippians, 

362. 
17,  James,  324;  John  Epistles, 

309- 
20,   Romans,    125;   Galatians, 

203. 

HEBREW  NATION,  Birth  of  the, 
Exodus,  171. 

Exodus  of  the,   Exodus,    195- 

198. 

Routes  of  the  exodus,  Exodus, 

196. 

HEBREWS,  THE  RACE,  gradu- 
ally trained,  Genesis,  7. 

oppressed.  Exodus,  13-25. 

HEBRON,  Joshua,   345;    Judges, 

15- 
David    reigns    at,  II.   Samuel, 

14-25- 

HEFELE,  Charles  J.,  Councils, 
Acts  II.,  379;  James,  14. 

HEGESIPPUS,  Acts  II.,  241 ;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  6,  2)^7;  James, 
28,  36,  2,9,  374- 

HEIFER,  The  red,  Numbers, 
217. 


HEINE,   Heinnch,   Isaiah  I.,  158, 

242,  413- 

HEINRICI,  Karl  F.  G.,  II.  Corin- 
thians, 95,  137,  199,  269. 

HEIR,  The  word,  Hebrews,  9. 

HELENA,  Empress,  Acts  I.,  66; 
II.,  186. 

HELIUS,  Pastoral  Epistles,  275, 
427. 

HELL,  Proverbs,  59,  75;  Isaiah 
I-j  33^  i  Twelve  Prophets  I., 
353. 

HELPERS,  L  Samuel,  165. 

HELPLESS,  The,  Care  of,  Leviti- 
cus, 399. 

HEMEROBAPTISTS,ActsII.,344. 

HENGSTENBERG,  E.  W.,  Psalm3 
L,  210;  II.,  143.  405,  418; 
III.,  50,  97,  104;  Daniel,  79, 
83,  88,  91,  94,  loi,  103,  106, 
143;  Revelation,  2,72. 

HENRY  II.,  of  England,  Temper 
of.  Proverbs,  206. 

HERBERT,  George,  Jeremiah  I., 
409. 

HERDER,  J.  G.,  Daniel,  35. 

HEREDITY  and  guilt.  Exodus, 
300. 

in  the  case  of  David,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 271. 

Influence  of,  Genesis,  114,  417; 

Exodus,  5 ;  Chronicles,  46-63. 

HERESY  and  magic.  Pastoral 
Epistles,  383. 

Meaning  in  the  New  Testament, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  296-299. 

Teachers  of,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

53,  382;  Peter,  283-287. 

HERMAS,  Acts  II.,  434;  Pastoral 
Epistles,  108,  125;  James,  18, 
20,  249;  Peter,  64. 


HERAfOGENES—HIRA  M 


149 


HFRMOGENES,     Pastoral    Epis- 

HEZEKIAH,  Reign  of,  Dc\iteron- 

tles,  319-323. 

omy,  39;  II.  Kings,     287-304; 

HEROD  THE  GREAT,  Matthew, 

Chronicles,  427-440. 

18;   Luke,   18;  Acts  H.,    102, 

Sickness    of,    II.    Kings,    305- 

151,  166;  James,  328. 

318;  Isaiah  I.,  375-388. 

defied,  Hebrews,  96. 

succeeded     by     Hezekiah,    II. 

HEROD      ANTIPAS,       Matthew, 

Kings,  351. 

188;    Mark,     170-176;     Luke, 

HIERARCHY,    Establishment    of 

270,  271;  Acts  H.,  30,  166. 

the,  Numbers,  208. 

HEROD  AGRIPPA,   Acts  H.,  95, 

HIEROCRACY,  Numbers,  6,  36^, 

164,  168,  183-187. 

403- 

HERODOTUS,     quoted,     Ecclesi- 

HIGH  PRIEST,  The,  Exodus,  2>7^- 

astes,    150;    Isaiah    H.,    115; 

Christ    our,   Mark,  445,  446; 

Jeremiah    L,    340;    H.,    228, 

Hebrews,  68-79. 

229;   Ezekiel,   5,   2>yy,  Daniel, 

Death  of,  Numbers,  404. 

1S9. 

Eleazar     installed.     Numbers, 

on  the  defeat  of  Sennacherib, 

241. 

H.  Kings,  345;  Isaiah  I.,  360. 

Jesus  Christ,  Leviticus,  62,183. 

on   the   Persians,   Ecclesiastes, 

Memory  of,  Numbers,  403. 

46,  48. 

Purified,   Exodus,  415. 

on  the  Scythian   invasion,  II. 

Results  from  Christ  being,  He- 

Kings, 379. 

brews,  182-195. 

HEROISM  demanded  in  the  church. 

HIGHER  CRITICISM,  I.  Kings,  3- 

Exodus,  107. 

13;  II.  Kings,  476-486. 

The  place  of.  Judges,  58. 

HILARY,  Acts  II.,  84. 

rare,  Judges,    149;  Isaiah  II., 

HILGENFELD,  Adolf,  James,  49, 

^72»' 

375,  399,  423- 

Worship       of,       Jeremiah      I., 

HILKIAH  finds  the  book   of  the 

239- 

law,  II.  Kings,  386-401. 

HERZOG,     J.    J.,     Encyclopcrdia, 

HILLEL,       Rabbi,      Ecclesiastes, 

.Acts  I.,   137,   181,  2'J?>. 

294. 

HEUZEY,  Leon,  Missi07i  Archaeol, 

HINTON,  James,  Isaiah  II.,  355. 

Acts  II.,  274,  281. 

HIPPOLYTUS,  Acts  I.,  vii.;  Pas- 

HEXAMETER in  James  Epistles, 

toral  Epistles,  128;  James,  20, 

James,  96. 

367- 

HEZEKIAH        abolishes        High 

9IRAM,   King  of  Tyre,  Acts   II., 

Places,  Jeremiah  II.,  19. 

183. 

and    Assyria,   II.   Kings,  319- 

and  Solomon,   I.    Kings,    152, 

350. 

23>^- 

and     Merodach-Baladan,     II. 

a  friend  of  David,  II.   Samuel, 

Kings,  314. 

7S. 

150                           HIRELINGS- 

HO  LUSTER 

HIRELINGS,  Leviticus,  179. 

HOBAB  THE  KENITE  refuses  to 

HISTORY  fails  in  accuracy,  Chron- 

join Israel,  Numbers,    109. 

icles,  119. 

Second    appeal    to.    Numbers, 

God  in.  Exodus,  6-13;  Deuter- 

III. 

onomy,    50;   I.   Kings,   39-45, 

HOFMANN,A.  G.,  II.  Corinthians, 

284;  Isaiah  II.,  87,  100,  106, 

65,   95,   215;   Galatians,    148, 

160. 

295;   Ephesians,    17,    Tt2>,  194, 

Imagination  in  writing,  Acts  I., 

417;  Hebrews,  44;  James,  399, 

128. 

407,  410,  438. 

Lessons    of,    I.   Kings,   50-57; 

HOGARTH,  D.  G.,  Acts  II.,  261. 

II.  Kings,  481. 

HOGARTH,    William,  The  artist, 

a  philosophy,  Isaiah  I.,   251- 

Ecclesiastes,  31. 

257- 

HOKHMA,  Job,  9,  16. 

Religion  of,  Ezra,  295-306. 

HOLINESS,  Building  up  in,  James, 

strewn  with  errors,  Isaiah  II., 

455- 

150. 

by   the   spirit,    Romans,   218- 

Value  of  the  study  of,    Ezra, 

230. 

320. 

Call  to,  Peter,  45. 

with  a  purpose,  I.  Kings,  46- 

Chastity,  Leviticus,  379-390. 

49. 

The  cost  of,  Genesis,  66. 

HISTORY  OF  THE  OLD  TESTA- 

 eventually  supreme,   I.   Corin- 

MENT,    Naturalistic    method 

thians,  133. 

with  the,  Joshua,  2-^^. 

Greeks  had  no  idea  of,  Deuter- 

 Supernatural  method  with  the, 

onomy,  100. 

Joshua,  4. 

Idea  of,  Numbers,  46. 

HITTITES,  Joshua,   56;  Judges, 

in  eating,  Leviticus,  Ti^y-Z"?^- 

65-67. 

Justification     and,      Romans, 

HITZIG,  Ferdinand,  Psalms  I.,  59, 

156-186. 

loi,  329;  II.,  59,  75,  71,  106, 

Law  of,  Leviticus,  379-417. 

210,  353;  III.,  120, 201; Isaiah 

Law  of  priestly,  Leviticus,  432- 

II.,  211,  348,  435;  Jeremiah 

446. 

I.,  3,  6,  9,  80,  94,  98,    121, 

Meaning  of,  Exodus,  22t^. 

192,  223,  259,  261,  269,  271, 

of  God,  I.  Samuel,  27;   Isaiah 

272,  301,  346,  347.  348;  Eze- 

L,  67. 

kiel,  72,  242,  374;  Daniel,  28; 

Penal     sanctions,      Leviticus, 

Twelve    Prophets  II.,   65,   86, 

418-431. 

123,  135,  ^T^"^,  451.498,  512; 

Separation  and,  Ezekiel,  419. 

Pastoral  Epistles,  9,  407. 

the  will  of  God,  Thessalonians, 

HOBAB  THE  KENITE,  Numbers, 

139,  140,  256-258. 

104. 

HOLLISTER,    John,    Lieut.,    In- 

 his  influence,  Numbers,  201. 

crease  in  family  of,  Exodus,  3. 

HOLSTEN—HOR  T 


151 


HOI.STFN,  Lucas,  Galatians,i22. 

HOOKER,     Richard,     Ephesians, 

HOLTZMANN,      Heinrich    Julius, 

379;    Pastoral    Epistles,   285, 

II.  Corinthians,  i ;  Kphesians, 

286;  James,  43,  65,  320,  339, 

lo;  James,  60. 

407,  452,  453;  John  Epistles, 

HOLY    GHOST,    Isaiah    I.,    185- 

228. 

188;  Thessalonians,  233-250; 

Discourse  of  Justification,   Ro- 

Hebrews, 152,  306. 

mans,  34. 

and  ordination.  Acts  II.,  414. 

Ecclesiastical  Policy,   Acts   II., 

Anointing    of    the,     Leviticus, 

29,  74,  238,  396,  419- 

202. 

Perpetitity  of  faith  in  the  elect. 

convinces    of  sin,   II.   Samuel, 

Romans,  306. 

175- 

HOPE,  Colossians,  26,  129,  130. 

Fruit  of  the,   Galatians,   375- 

as  a  motive  power.    Pastoral 

389- 

Epistles,  259-269. 

. Hohness  by  the,  Romans,  218- 

The  Christian,  II.  Corinthians, 

230. 

173-185. 

^ — Justified  Hfe  by  the,  Romans, 

for  the  church.  Psalms,  115. 

203-217. 

The  God  of,  Romans,  404. 

Manifestations  of  the.  Acts  I., 

of  faith,  Hebrews,  276. 

89-106. 

of  Job,  Job,  210. 

New    wine    of  the,    Ephesians, 

Ours  in  God,  Ephesians,  71. 

336-350. 

Patience  of,  Thessalonians,  30- 

outpoured,  Isaiah  I.,  268-270; 

2^:^- 

Twelve  Prophets  II.,  422-430. 

a  spiritual  thing.  Judges,  2^22. 

Partaking  of,  Hebrews,  91. 

HOPHNI  and   Phinehas,   Evil  ex- 

 promised,  Joshua,    127;  John 

ample  of,  I.  Samuel,  50. 

II.,  161-171,  207-225. 

slain,  1.  Samuel,  69. 

Sin   against  the,  Hebrews,  95. 

take  the  ark  to  battle,  1.  Sam- 

 thetransfiguringspirit,II.  Cor- 

uel, 63. 

inthians,  127-143. 

HOR,  Mount,  Numbers,  234. 

HOLY  PLACE,  Symbolism  of  the. 

HORACE,  Ecclesiastes,  115,  185; 

Numbers,  79. 

Daniel,     139;    .Acts    II.,    276; 

HOLYOAKE,  Mr.,  I.  Corinthians, 

James,  266. 

9- 

HOREB,  The  Mount    of  God,    I. 

HOME,    Influences    of  the,    Prov- 

Kings, 426. 

erbs,  62  64. 

HORNEJUS,  James,  222. 

Religion  in  the,  John  II.,  330. 

HORSES    of  Solomon,    I.   Kings, 

HOMEBORN,  The,  Numbers,  181. 

147. 

HONESTY,  I.  Samuel,  188;  Prov- 

HORT,   F.    J.  A.,  Thessalonians, 

erbs,  224. 

2^^, 

HOOK,  Dean  W.  P.,  Acts  I.,  381. 

See  WESTCOTT  and  HORT. 

152 


HO  SEA  II.— HO  SEA  IX. 


HOSEA,   The  prophet,   11.  Kings, 

HOSEA    III.,   5,  II.    Kings,    201; 

203-208;   Twelve  Prophets  I., 

Chronicles,    144;  Ezekiel,  313, 

212  sq. 

314- 

a     prophet     of    love,    Twelve 

HOSEA  IV.,    I,   2,    Jeremiah    II., 

Prophets  I.,  233. 

276. 

HOSEA,  The  Book,  Twelve  Proph- 

 3,  Jeremiah  I.,  164. 

ets  I.,  211-354. 

4,  II.  Kings,  212,  236. 

Authenticity  of,  Twelve  Proph- 

 6,  Ezekiel,  440. 

ets  I.,  223. 

8,  I.  Kings,  205. 

Story    of    the    prodigal    wife. 

15,  II.  Kings,  20,  204. 

Twelve  Prophets  I.,  232-252. 

16,  Jeremiah  I.,  95. 

The  text.  Twelve  Prophets  I., 

HOSEA  v.,  I,  II.  Kings,  236. 

220-223. 

11-13,  II.  Kings,  225. 

HOSEA  I.,  4,  n.  Kings,  39,  130, 

13,  II.  Kings,  204;  Mark,  60. 

140. 

HOSEA  VI.,  I,  Jeremiah  II.,  22,2>- 

5,  H.  Kings,  239. 

1,  7,  Jeremiah  I.,  407. 

10,  Romans,  256;  Peter,  yy. 

2,  3,  Revelation,  y^^. 

HOSEA  H.,  Joshua,  161,  162. 

4,  Jeremiah  II.,  152. 

2,  Song  of  Solomon,  45 ;   Eze- 

6,  Jeremiah  I.,  207;  Mark,  59. 

kiel,  314;  James,  227. 

7,  Jeremiah  II.,  288,  347. 

6,  Proverbs,  39. 

9,  11.   Kings,   205,   236;  Jere- 

 7,  Jeremiah  I.,  98. 

miah  II.,  284. 

8,  II.  Corinthians,  352. 

13,  Jeremiah  I.,  107. 

II,  Jeremiah  I.,  370. 

HOSEA  VII.,  2-7,  II.  Kings,  206, 

14,  15,  Ezekiel,  185. 

207. 

15,  Joshua,  187;  Jeremiah  I., 

8-12,  II.  Kings,  225. 

77' 

9,  10,  II.  Kings,  233. 

16,  Mark,  62,. 

II,  II.  Kings,  204. 

18,  Jeremiah  II.,  347;  Ezekiel, 

HOSEA  Vni.,  I,  Jeremiah  n.,  288, 

313. 

347. 

19,  Deuteronomy,  405;  Twelve 

4,  Psalms  II.,  132. 

Prophets   II.,    56;   Revelation, 

5,  H.  Kings,  232. 

321. 

9,  II.  Kings,  204,  225. 

19,  20,  Mark,  62. 

HOSEA  IX.,   2,  Twelve  Prophets 

22,   Twelve  Prophets  II.,  140. 

II.,  247. 

2T,,  Jeremiah  II.,  340;  Twelve 

3,  4,  Ezekiel,  6-s,  2i'^2i\  Daniel, 

Prophets    II.,    12^-,    Romans, 

130. 

256;  Peter,  TJ. 

3-6,  II.  Kings,  204. 

HOSEA  III.,  3,  Song  of  Solomon, 

3,  12,  17,  II.  Kings,  237. 

45. 

7-9,  Jeremiah  II.,  283,  299. 

- — 4,  II.  Kings,  255,  290. 

10,  Jeremiah  I.,  131. 

HO  SEA    VHL— HUSBAND 


153 


HOSEA    VIII.,     15,   Jeremiah     I., 

^^. 
HOSEA  X.,  I,  EzekicI,  128. 

5,  II.  Kings,  2T^2,  388. 

10,  II.  Kings,  236. 

13,  14,  II.  Kings,  204. 

14,  II.  Kings,  142,  222. 

HOSEA  XL.    I,   Isaiah    II.,    268; 

Jeremiah  I.,  yy,  126. 

4,  Jeremiah  II.,  331. 

5,  II.  Kings,  204. 

8,  Jeremiah  II.,  330. 

8-1 1,  II.  Kings,  237. 

9,   II.   Kings,   246;  Isaiah    I., 

64;    II.,     137;    Jeremiah    II., 

330. 
HOSEA  XII.,  I,  II.  Kings,  204. 

4,  Jeremiah  I.,  192. 

7,   I.   Kings,   233;    II.    Kings, 

192. 
HOSEA  XIII.,  7-1 1,  II.  Kings,  240. 

9,  Peter,  309. 

14,  Ephesians,  62. 

16,  II.  Kings,  142,  221. 

HOSEA  XIV.,  Jeremiah  II.,  330. 

1,  4,  Jeremiah  I.,  130. 

3,  II.  Kings,  204;  Peter,  72. 

5,  Ezekiel,  363. 

HOSHEA,     King     of    Israel,    II. 

Kings,  235-247. 
HOSPITALITY,  Duty  of.  Genesis, 

174- 

its  beauty   and  reward,  Gene- 
sis, 173. 

lacking  in  Bethlehem,  Genesis, 

175- 
without      murmuring,      Peter, 

169. 
HOURS,  Canonical,  Acts  II.,  122. 
HOUSE  OF  GOD,  The,   a  refuge-, 

I.  Samuel,  6. 


HOW,  Song  of  Solomon,  67-69. 

HOWARD,  John,  Acts  I.,  291. 

HUGO,  Victor,  Isaiah  L,  7;  John 
Epistles,  94. 

HUMAN  FRAILTY,  Job,  177. 

HUMAN  NATURE,  the  same,  Jere- 
miah I.,  193. 

HUMAN    PROGRESS,    Isaiah    I., 

259- 

HUMANITARIAN  relief.  Exodus, 
3S;  John  Epistles,  195. 

HUMBOLDT,  Alexander  von,  Cos- 
mos, John  Epistles,  137. 

HUMILIATION  of  Christ,  He- 
brews, 37,  44. 

HUMILITY  and  pride.  Proverbs, 
44,  127,  179-190. 

Be    clothed    with,   Peter,   213- 

222. 

False,  Philippians,  92. 

Loveand,  Galatians,  syy,  378. 

of  Ezekiel,  Ezekiel,  44. 

of  the  soul,  Colossians,   309, 

310. 

HUNGER,  Temptation  of,  Mat- 
thew, 44. 

HUPFIELD,  Hermann,  Psalms  I., 
6,  21,  59,  179,  205,  206,  263, 
274,286,  321,  363;  II.,  59,  75, 
106,  107,  117,  168,  184,  i86, 
190,  234,  260,  274,  307,  377, 
381,  405,  424,  427,  445,471, 
490;  III.,  4,  20,  44,  52,  65, 
103,  120,  188,  222,  242,372, 
40I,  414,  442,  457. 

HURD,  Bp.  Richard,  Jeremiah  I., 
409. 

HUSBAND  and  wife,  Colossians, 
336-340;  Peter,  107-118. 

of  one  wife,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

118. 


154 


HUSBANDMAN— HYRCANUS 


HUSBANDMAN  as  a  type  of  the 

HUXTABLE,   Prebendary  Edgar, 

Christian,     Pastoral    Epistles, 

Galatians,  121,  306. 

350-352. 

HYMENAEUS,      Punishment     of, 

HUSHAI,  The  Archite,  II.  Samuel, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  7476,   t^-jt,. 

^2^-?- 

HYMNS,  Ancient  Christian,   Pas- 

 Counsel  of,  II.  Samuel,  253. 

toral  Epistles,  134. 

HUSS,  John,  persecuted,  I.  Kings, 

See  PSALMODY. 

422. 

HYPAEPA,  Acts  H.,  31. 

HUTCHINSON,  Colonel,  The  Pur- 

HYPNOTISM,   Dr.    A.    Moll    on. 

itan,  Deuteronomy,  190-191. 

Acts  I.,  100,  123,  230,  360. 

HUTHER,    J.    E.,  John  Epistles. 

HYPOCRISY,  Genesis,   281,  401; 

58. 

Proverbs,  85;  Peter,  6}^. 

HUTTON,  R.  H.,  James,  95,  387. 

Corruption      of    worship    by, 

HUXLEY,   Professor  T.   H.,   Pas- 

Psalms II.,  122. 

toral  Epistles,  173. 

Danger  of,  Numbers,  281. 

and    the    necessity    of  grace. 

in  the  early  church.    Acts    I., 

Deuteronomy,  236,  2t^-/. 

22y. 

and       righteousmess      indeed, 

of  Absalom,  II.  Samuel,  222. 

Deuteronomy,  165. 

of  Scribes  and  Pharisees,  Mat- 

 Evolution  and  creation,  Gene- 

thew, 334. 

sis,  10. 

HYRCANUS,  Acts  I.,  125;  II.,  31. 

IB  LEA  M— IMPOSITION  OF  HANDS 


155 


IBLEAM,  Joshua,  303. 
ICHABOD  born,  I.  Samuel,  70. 
irONIUM,  Acts  II.,  199,  260. 
inKAL,  The  Christians,  Peter,  41- 

54- 

The  lofty,  perilous  unless  ap- 
plied, John  Epistles,  18S-203. 

IDEALISM,  Job,  65,  79. 

of  Ezra,  Ezra,  160. 

of  Isaiah,  Isaiah  I.,  25-27. 

IDLENESS,   Proverbs,  262-274. 

not  religion,  Exodus,  93. 

IDOLATRY,  Job,  m;  Isaiah  II., 
91,  94-97,  116,  152,  177;  Jere- 
miah II.,  283-294;  Galatians, 
366. 

and  the  worship  of  God,  Jere- 
miah I.,  215-247. 

forbidden.  Exodus,  295-302. 

Laws    against,    Deuteronomy, 

277-294. 

Modern,  Judges,  81. 

of  Ahaz,  II.  Kings,  274. 

of  Amaziah,  II.  Kings,  173. 

of  Israel,  Judges,  230;  I.  Sam- 
uel, 88;  11.  Kings,  249;  Ezekiel, 
172-188. 

of  Jeroboam,  I.  Kings,  2Zy. 

of    Manassah,     Deuteronomy, 

121;  11.  Kings,  360-363. 

punished,        Leviticus,       425; 

Judges,  51. 

Zephaniah        denounces,       II. 

Kings,  375. 

IDUMAEA,  Religion  of,  Job,  25. 


IGNATIUS,   Pastoral   Epistles,   5, 

10,  2*2,^  69,  113,  114,  2>7^; 
Hebrews,  76;  Janus,  3,  130, 
212,  279,  429;  Peter,  263; 
John  Epistles,  45,  52,  65,  66, 
27.3- 

ILLUMINATION,  Gift  of,  He- 
brews, 93. 

ILLUSIVENESS  OF  LIFE,  He- 
brews, 221. 

IMAGE  of  God's  substance,  He- 
brews, 13. 

Use  of  the  word,  Hebrews,  1 76. 

IMAGE-WORSHIP,  Leviticus,444 ; 
Deuteronomy,  y^,  256. 

IMAGINATION,  nature's  highest 
gift,  Hebrews,  4. 

IMMANUEL,  Isaiah  I.,  102,  115, 
124  sq.   133  sq. ;  Matthew,  10, 

1 1. 

IMMER,   A.,  Pastoral  Epistles,  9, 

407. 
IMMORTALITY,      Exodus,      50; 

Isaiah  I.,  385,  394,  397,  410, 

444-452. 
and  the  "Tree  of  Life,"   Gene- 
sis, 19. 

Christ  and,  John  I.,  365. 

Conviction      of.      Psalms      I., 

141. 

Principle  of.  Job,  240. 

IMMUTABLE  THINGS,  Hebrews, 

103. 
IMPOSITION     OF    HANDS,    See 

LAYING  ON  OF  HANDS. 


156                          IMPOTENCE- 

-INNOCENCE 

IMPOTENCE  confessed,  Numbers, 

INDIVIDUAL      man,    Isaiah    II., 

285. 
IMPRISONMENT    of   Paul,     Pas- 

41-43- 
Providence  to  the.  Exodus,  66. 

toral  Epistles,  13,  24,  28,  362, 

Religion  of  the,   Ezekiel,    143- 

401. 

of  Timothy,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

24. 

158. 
INDIVIDUALISM,  Hebrews,  141. 
INDRA,  Drunkenness  of,  Proverbs, 

IMPULSES  not    accidents,    Exo- 
dus,   T^-J. 

279. 
INDUSTRY    commended,    Thessa- 

INCARNATION    and     reconcilia- 
tion, Colossians,  96-99. 

and    the    tabernacle,    Exodus, 

375- 

lonians,  2iTl-2>'^'^- 
A  life  of  quiet,  Thessalonians, 

160-165. 
INFIDELITY,  Psalms  I.,  125. 

the  crown  of  creation,  Genesis, 

13- 

Delay  of,  Acts  II.,  99. 

Models  of,  Luke,  49. 

a  necessity,  Luke,  48. 

not  incredible,  Matthew,  8. 

of  Christ,  John  I.,  3-17;  Phil- 

ippians,      11 2-1 27;      Pastoral 

A  cause  of,  Job,  115. 

prayerless.  Psalms  I.,  128. 

INFLUENCE     depends     on     our 

standing.  Judges,  15. 
of   friendship.    Proverbs,   230- 

233- 

of  the  home.  Proverbs,  58. 

of  music,  I.  Samuel,  275. 

Epistles,    44,    353,   363,   389; 
Hebrews,  45  sq. 

0.  T.  prophesies  of,  Isaiah  II., 

I35»  141- 

of     women,     I.     Corinthians, 

252. 

Wrong,  Joshua,  336. 

INHERITANCE,    The    Christian, 

INCENSE,  Altar  of,  Hebrews,  151. 

in  the  tabernacle.  Exodus,  417- 

419,  423. 

Colossians,  56-61. 

The  heavenly,  Peter,  17-28. 

INHERITED      OPINIONS,     Job, 

INCEST,  Leviticus,  381. 

at  Corinth,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

72>,  265. 
INDEPENDENCE,    Charity    and, 

169. 

INIQUITY  of  the  priesthood.  Num- 
bers, 214. 

of  the    tabernacle,    Numbers, 

Thessalonians,  151-168. 
INDICH,  Acts  I.,  415. 

212. 
INNOCENCE    and  virtue,   Philip- 

INDIVIDUAL,      and      the     com- 

unity,  Isaiah  I.,  389. 
conviction,  I.  Samuel,  226. 

pians,  144. 

in  the  home,  II.  Samuel,    194. 

The  law  defines.  Exodus,  281. 

eftort,  I.  Samuel,  227. 

of  circumstance.  Genesis,    19; 

Importance  of  the,  Exodus,  26. 

instruments  in  God's  hands,  I. 

Exodus,  9. 
suffering  with  the  guilty.  Gene- 

Samuel, 22^. 

sis,  348. 

rATSCfUP  TIONS—ISA I  A  H 


157 


INSCRIPTIONS    on    the     IVmpK- 

wall,  Acts  II.,  42S. 
INSINCERITY,     Numbers,      270; 

Song  of  Solomon,  164. 
INSPIRATION,       Numbers,       13; 

Isaiah  I.,  123,  213,  T^yz;  Luke, 

2,  12;  James,  298,   344,   405, 

424. 

claimed  by  Elihu,  Job,  342. 

Doubtful  readings  and  verbal, 

James,  401-406. 
the  need    of  the    hour,    Ezra, 

209. 
of  the  author  of  Job,  Job,   t^z, 

of  Moses,  Numbers,  144. 

Poetic,  Psalms  II.,  66. 

of  prophets,  Numbers,  143. 

• of  the    Psalmist,    Psalms  II., 

102. 

of  Scripture,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

381,  393-396. 

verbal,  II.  Kings,  476. 

INTEGRITY  of  Job,  Job,  72-75. 

INTERCESSION,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 83,  86,  326;  James,  325- 
342. 

mutual,    Thessalonians,     359- 

374- 
INTERMEDIATE  STATE,  Acts  I., 

124. 
INTOLERANCE,    Moral,    Judges, 

354- 
INTROSPECTION,  Hebrews,  105. 
INTRUSIONS  ON  LIFE,  Numbers, 

232- 
INVESTITURE  of  Hebrew  priests, 

Leviticus,  191. 
IRENAEUS,  .Acts  I.,  13,  121,  276, 

286;    II.,    416-418;     Pastoral 

Epistles,  6,  112,  113,  294,  338, 


lil^t^  4«5;  James,  4.    20,    434. 

438,     444;     Peter,     vi. ;    John 

Epistles,   12,  43,  287. 
IRENARCH.  Acts  II.,  216. 
IRISH  LONGEVITY,  Acts  I.,  5. 
IRISH    ACADEMY,    Royal,    Act: 

II.,  89. 
IRRESOLUTE,      The,      Numbers 

107. 
IRVING,    Edward,   Song  of  Solo 

mon,  283;  Acts  I.,  198. 
ISAAC  and  the  fraud    of  Jacob 

Genesis,  267-278. 

and  Ishmael,  Genesis,  212-225 

Blessing  of,  Hebrews,  102,  259 

born,  Genesis,  168. 

called  Wordsworth  of  the  Old 

Testament,  Genesis,  255. 

Death  of.  Genesis,  318. 

Marriage     of,     Genesis,     240- 

253- 

Patience  of.  Genesis,  242. 

Resurrection  of,  Hebrews,  228. 

Sacrifice  of.  Genesis,  198-21 1. 

Sons  of,  Genesis,  254-266. 

ISAIAH,  Numbers,  213. 

and  Ahaz,  II.  Kings,  265-272. 

and  xl.-lxvi.,  Isaiah  II.,  2t^,  24. 

and  Hezekiah,  II.  Kings,  2^-}- 

350. 

and  Moses,  Numbers,  146. 

apprenticeship,   Isaiah  I.,  19. 

Call  and  consecration  of,  Isaiah 

I.,  57sq. 
compared       with       Cromwell, 

Isaiah  I.,   i6osq.,  220. 

compared  with  Job,  Job,  10. 

compared  with  Mazzini,  Isaiah 

L,  85-87. 
compared  with  Moses,   Isaiah 

I.,  88. 


158 


ISAIAH— ISAIAH  I. 


ISAIAH  contrasted  with  crusad- 
ers, Isaiah  I.,  367. 

contribution  to  the    religious 

development  of  Israel,  Isaiah  I., 
loi,  284,  288. 

Death  of,  Deuteronomy,  43. 

Ezekiel  and,  Ezekiel,  35-38. 

Faith  of,  Hebrews,  261. 

habit  of  appealing  to  the  peo- 
ple, Isaiah  I.,  119. 

his  prophesies  of  exile,  Isaiah 

II.,  23,  29. 

his     reception,    Deuteronomy, 

39- 
Humanity  of,   Isaiah  I.,   285, 

294. 

Ideal  of,  Isaiah  I.,  392. 

an  idealist,  Isaiah  I.,  25. 

Imagination  and  conscience  of, 

Isaiah  I.,  335. 
Inspiration   of,  Isaiah  I.,  213, 

lesson  for  all  time,   Isaiah  I., 

366. 

no  fatalist,  Isaiah  I.,  no. 

Patriotism  of,  Isaiah  I.,  30sq. 

Personal  religion  of,  Isaiah  I., 

391- 
Personality  of,  Isaiah  I.,  75  sq., 

253- 

a  prophet,  Isaiah  I.,  30. 

a  realist,  Isaiah  I.,  27. 

regard  for  animals,  Isaiah  I., 

190. 
Sanity     of,     Isaiah     I.,     109, 

I54sq.,  166,  300. 
Satire  of,   Isaiah  I.,   29,    139, 

156. 
saved  from   the  popular  drift, 

Isaiah  I.,  121. 
Scorn  of,  Isaiah  I.,  127. 


ISAIAH,    Self-control     of,    Isaiah 

I.,  166. 
a  son  of  Jerusalem,  Isaiah   L, 

22. 

Style  of,  Isaiah  I.,  281. 

Threefold  vision,  Isaiah  I.,  23- 

25- 

Triumph  of,  Isaiah  I.,  323sq. 

use  of  the  word  righteousness, 

Isaiah  II.,  216-218. 
walks     stripped     for    a    sign, 

Isaiah  I.,  199. 
working    of  his    imagination, 

Isaiah  I.,  234. 

youth,  Isaiah  I.,  21,  59. 

ISAIAH,    The    Book,    Isaiah    I., 

i-xv. ;  II.,  i-xvi. 

Chronology,  Isaiah  I.,  i  ;II.,  i. 

composite,  Isaiah  II.,  4,  5. 

Date    of,    xl-lxvi,    Isaiah    II., 

2-25,    65-68,    112,    146,    212, 

223,  233-235,  290,  313. 
Post  exilic  elements  in  xl-lxvi, 

Isaiah  II.,  18,  414,  458,  465. 
Pre-exilic   elements    in  xl-lxvi, 

Isaiah  II.,  18-20,  409. 
Unity    of,    xl-lxvi,    Isaiah    II., 

18,   21,   212,   222,    234,    314, 

336,  409,  441,  446. 
ISAIAH  I.,  3,  Ezra,  207. 

5,  6,  Psalms  I.,  379. 

6,  James,  67,  328. 

7,  Jeremiah  I.,  79. 

9,  Romans,  257. 

10,  21,  Revelation,  184,  292. 

10-17,  II.  Kings,  215;  Song  of 

Solomon,  118. 
1 1 -1 6,  I.  Kings,  213;  Jeremiah 

I-,  259,  370. 

13,  Jeremiah  I.,  298,  368. 

13,  Revelation,  174. 


ISAIAH  I.— ISAIAH  IX. 


159 


ISAIAH   I.,  14,  Galatians,  266. 
15,  Proverbs,  26;  Jeremiah  I., 

158. 

18,  Jeremiah  I.,  g6. 

19,  20,    II.    Kings,    34S;    Jire- 

miah  I.,  82. 

26,  Jeremiah  I.,  120. 

ISAIAH  II.,  2,  Jeremiah   I.,    123; 

Daniel,      161 ;     Matthew,     67; 

Peter,  2>:S' 
2-4,    II.  Kings,  2Gy,  Jeremiah 

II,,  107;  Ezekiel,  221. 
3,  Proverbs,  374;  Jeremiah  I., 

85. 

19,  Revelation,  106. 

ISAIAH  III.,  1-12,  II.  Kings,  261. 

4,  II.  Kings,  260;  James,  447. 

10,  I.  Kings,   119. 

■ 16,  II.  Kings,  263. 

1823,  Peter,  m. 

22i^   Twelve  Prophets  II.,  294. 

26,  Jeremiah  I.,  293. 

ISAIAH  IV.,  I,  Jeremiah  I.,    158. 
2,    Chronicles,    144;   Jeremiah 

II.,  324;  Twelve  Prophets  II., 

293. 

4,  Leviticus,  190. 

6,  Psalms  I.,  263. 

II,  Deuteronomy,  430. 

IS.AI.AH   v.,    I,   Jeremiah    I,,    95; 

Ezekiel,  128. 

7,  II.  Kings,  263. 

25,  Jeremiah  I.,  116. 

26,  Daniel,  67. 

2629,    II.    Kings,    221,    347; 

Daniel,  258. 

30,  Jeremiah  I.,  293. 

ISAIAH  VI.,  I,  3,  Kphesians,   93. 
3,  Psalms  III.,  71  ;  Revelation, 

67. 
4,  Revelation,  264. 


ISAIAH  VI.,  5,  Revelation,  17. 

6,    Jeremiah    I.,    230;    Daniel, 

262. 

7,   Luke,   (>6;   Romans,    15. 

13,   Jtrmii.ih  I.,  120;  Kn-kiel, 

65- 
ISAIAH     VII.,     1-25,     II.     Kings, 
270. 

6,  Daniel,  200. 

S,    Jeremiah    I.,   305;    Ezekiel, 

353- 

9,  Chronicles,  95. 

15,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  322. 

17,  Chronicles,  355. 

18,  II.  Kings,  347;  Daniel,  dj. 

ISAIAH  VIII.,  I,  Twelve  Prophets 
I.,  58;  II.,  266. 

2,      Chronicles,     201;    Twelve 

Prophets  II.,  265. 

3,  II.  Kings,  I'^y. 

5-8,  Revelation,  151. 

6,  7,   II.   Kings,   229;   Psalms 

II.,  82;  Ezekiel,  484. 

7,  Jeremiah  I.,  93;  Daniel,  2t,S,. 

12,  13,  Jeremiah  I.,  228;  Peter, 

125. 

14,  Romans,  25S;  Peter,  75. 

16-18,  Ezekiel,  54. 

18,  II.   Kings,   264;  Hebrews, 

40. 

19,  Leviticus,  411. 

20,  Jeremiah  I.,  293. 

21,  Jeremiah  I.,  230. 

ISAIAH  IX.,  2,  Psalms  III.,    163. 

3,  Psalms  II.,  436. 

5,  Romans,  263. 

6,  II.  Samuel,  120. 

7,  Chronicles,  143. 

8-17,  II.  Kings,  232. 

10,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  ^t^,  41, 

68. 


IGO 


ISAIAH  JX.— ISAIAH  XXII. 


ISAIAH    IX.,     II  i6,     II.     Kings, 

ISAIAH  X.,  2,  Ezekiel,  312. 

5-34,  Ezekiel,  2i7^- 

7,  Ezekiel,  T^yo. 

8,  II.  Kings,  225, 

10,  12,  Peter,  ^2,. 

n,  II.  Kings,  291. 

14,  II.  Kings,  301. 

18,  Jeremiah  I.,  82. 

22,  23,  Romans,  256. 

2?i,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  379. 

2'&-2>'2t  Joshua,  319;  II.  Kings, 

300. 
2,:!>^   34.   11.   Kings,   340,   348; 

Daniel,  219. 
ISAIAH  XL,    I,   II.    Kings,    340; 

Chronicles,  144;  Jeremiah  II., 

324;  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  293; 

Luke,    52;       Revelation,      y%, 

4,  Twelve  Prophets  IL,  154. 

5,  Twelve  Prophets  II. ,  140. 

10,  Romans,  401;  Revelation, 

270. 

10-16,  Jeremiah  II. ,  329. 

12,  Jeremiah  I.,  125. 

13,  Jeremiah  IL,  343;  Ezekiel, 

314- 

ISAIAH  XII.,  3,  Peter,  314;  Rev- 
elation, 126. 

ISAIAH  XIIL,  3,  Jeremiah  I.,  68. 

6,  Peter,  327. 

9,  10,  Revelation,  106. 

10,  Jeremiah  I.,  22-]. 

11-16,  II.  Kings,  142. 

13,  I.  Kmgs,  440. 

• 16,     IL    Kings,    222\    Psalms 

III.,  374- 

■ 19,  II.  Kings,  315. 

19-22.  Revelation,  304. 


ISAIAH  XIV.,  3,  Twelve  Prophets 

IL,  150. 
4,  II.  Kings,  315;  Daniel,  153; 

Song  of  Solomon,  66. 

8,  II.  Kings,  340. 

9,  Daniel,  256. 

12,  Revelation,  142. 

14,  Psalms  I.,  67. 

16,  Ecclesiastes,  42. 

18,  Twelve  Prophets  II. ,  112. 

18-20,  Ezekiel,  277. 

22,  John  Epistles,  183. 

29,  II.  Kings,  210,  347. 

30,  John  Epistles,  183. 

31,  Jeremiah  II. ,  299. 

ISAIAH  XV.,  I,  2,  II.  Kings,  190. 

5,  Jeremiah  IL,  234. 

7,  II.  Kings,  191. 

9,  John  Epistles,  183. 

ISAIAH  XVI.,  5,  Chronicles,  143. 
6,  Jeremiah  I.,  171;  IL,   239; 

Ezekiel,  226;  Peter,  360. 

10,  Jeremiah  L,  ^2. 

ISAIAH  XVIL,  6,  Revelation,  58. 
12-14,    Ezekiel,    Z7^\    Daniel, 

238;     Twelve     Prophets     IL, 

289. 
ISAIAH  XIX.,  4,  IL  Kings,  343. 

5,  Job,  10. 

13,  Job,  10. 

14,  15,  Jeremiah  I.,  292. 

19,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  369. 

24,  25,  IL  Kings,  350. 

25,  Jeremiah  IL,  222>. 

ISAIAH  XX.,  I,  II.  Kings,  331. 

2,  3,  II.  Kings,  79. 

ISAIAH  XXL,  2,  Daniel,  219. 
ISAIAH    XXIL,    1-13,    IL   Kings, 

5,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  429. 

II,  Jeremiah  I.,  68. 


ISA  I  A  H  XX I L  —ISA  lA  H  XXXI I '. 


161 


ISAIAH  XXII..  12,  13,  Jaims, 
2S4. 

15,  I.  Kings,  143. 

17,  18,  II.  Kings,  298. 

2  1,  22,  II.  Kings,  335;  Revela- 
tion, 16,  59. 

ISAIAH  XXIII.,  8,  Kzekicl,  27,2. 

13,  Daniel,  49. 

17,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  367, 

ISAIAH  XXIV.,  10,  Revelation, 
308. 

19,  Peter,  356. 

2  I,  Daniel,  202 ;  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  316. 

23,  Revelation,  56,  359. 

ISAIAH  XXV.,  2,  Twelve  Prophets 

I.,  33' 

7,  Acts  I.,  97. 

3,   Ephesians,   62 ;  Revelation, 

128. 
ISAIAH XXVI.,  I,  Revelation,  365. 

2,  Psalms  III.,  238. 

4,  Peter,  70. 

9,  Daniel,  184. 

II,  II.  Kings,  18. 

13,  Jeremiah  I.,  119. 

19,    Ezekiel,    350;    Ephesians, 

335- 

ISAIAH  XXVII.,  I,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  504. 

9,  Romans,  308. 

ISAIAH  XXVIII.,  I,  Joshua,  301; 
Jeremiah  I.,  294. 

7,  Jeremiah  I.,  292. 

7-13,  II.  Kings,  302,  303. 

16,  Daniel,  161;  Romans,  258, 

269;  Peter,  7^. 

23-29,  Proverbs,  218. 

■ 29,  Job,  10. 

ISAIAH  XXIX.,  4,  Jeremiah  II., 
226. 


ISAIAH    XXIX.,    5-8,    II.    Kings, 
348. 

6,  I.  Kings,  440. 

10,  Romans,  289. 

II,  II.  Kings,  291. 

13,    14,   I.   Kings,    220;    Jere- 
miah I.,  265;  Colossians,  250. 

16,  Psalms  III.,  107. 

17,  Jeremiah  I.,  82. 

ISAIAH  XXX.,  I,  Jeremiah  I.,  92. 

1-7,   II.  Kings,  301;  Jercniicili 

I.,   106. 

3,  Chronicles,  355. 

4,  Daniel,  68. 

9,  22,  II.  Kings,  291. 

14,  Jeremiah  I,  291. 

20-33,  II.  Kings,  348. 

26,  Daniel,  178. 

28,  II.  Kings,  340. 

29,  Peter,  70. 

:i2f  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  154. 

3)3)^  Jeremiah  I.,  401. 

ISAIAH  XXXI.,  I, Chronicles,  355; 
Jeremiah  I.,  231. 

ISAIAH    XXXII.,    I,   Jeremiah  I., 
190;  Ezekiel,  308. 

15,  Ezekiel,  363. 

17,  Jeremiah  I.,  181. 

18,  Revelation,  91. 

ISAIAH  XXXIII.,  I,  James,  276. 

3,  II.  Kings,  342. 

8,  II.  Kings,  331,  336. 

9,  .Acts  I.,  408. 

13-16,  Psalms  I.,  138. 

14,  E.xodus,  374. 

16-21,  Jeremiah  II.,   t,2S. 

18,  II.  Kings,  342. 

21,  Psalms  II.,  80. 

22',  II.  Kmgs,  399-401. 

ISAIAH  XXXIV.,  2,  4,  Revelation, 
106. 


162                    ISA  I  A  H  XXXI V. 

—ISAIAH   XIIV. 

ISAIAH    XXXIV.,  4,    PeU-r,   339, 

ISAIAH     XL.,     17,    Jeremiah    I., 

356. 

230. 

ISAIAH  XXXV.,  2,  Psalms  III.,  63. 

19-24,  Jeremiah  I.,  22t,. 

7,  Psalms  III.,  167. 

20,  Jeremiah  I.,  2t^2. 

8,  Ecclesiastes,  104. 

22,  Job,  II. 

10,  Revelation,  240. 

25,  Revelation,  223. 

ISAIAH  XXXVI.,  I,  2,  Jeremiah  I., 

26-29,  Psalms  HI.,  443;  Dan- 

293- 

iel,  202;  Revelation,  124. 

4,  Daniel,  153. 

2-/,  Jeremiah  I.,  146. 

6,  Song  of  Solomon,  292;  Eze- 

31,     Peter,     195;     Revelation, 

kiel,  265. 

211. 

7,  Jeremiah  II.,  18. 

ISAIAH  XLL,  2,  Revelation,  89. 

20,  Daniel,  175. 

7,  Jeremiah  I.,  22^^. 

ISAIAH    XXXVII.,    2,    II.   Kings, 

8,    Romans,    104;     Galatians, 

299- 

186. 

8,  Joshua,  296. 

14,  II.  Kings,  246;  Psalms  I., 

24,  25,  Chronicles,  144;  Twelve 

215;  Song  of  Solomon,  261. 

Prophets  I.,  437. 

15,  Daniel,  153. 

26,  Jeremiah  I.,  68. 

18,  Psalms  III.,  167. 

29,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  148; 

23,  Jeremiah  I.,  229. 

II.,  285. 

24,  Jeremiah  I.,  230. 

31,  Jeremiah  I.,  120. 

ISAIAH  XLIL,    I,  Song  of  Solo- 

 T^T^,  Jeremiah  I.,  331. 

mon,  160. 

34,  Jeremiah  I.,  293. 

2,  3,  I.  Kings,  397. 

35,  Chronicles,  143. 

3,  Galatians,  395. 

ISAIAH  XXXVIII.,  5,  Chronicles, 

7,  Psalms  HI.,  163. 

143. 

17,  Psalms  HI.,  64. 

6,  II.  Kings,  349. 

18,  Jeremiah  II.,  273. 

10-20,  II.  Kings,  307,  313- 

21,  Leviticus,  173. 

12,  James,  199. 

25,  II.  Samuel,  328. 

17,  I.  Kings,  52;  Peter,  152. 

ISAIAH  XLIIL,  2,  3,  Daniel,   52, 

18,    19,   Psalms  I.,   2^r^  III> 

219. 

220. 

8,  Jeremiah  II.,  2-j2i. 

ISAIAH  XXXIX.,  7,  Daniel,  9, 127. 

14,  Ecclesiastes,  41. 

ISAIAH  XL.,  2,  Psalms  II.,  453; 

25,    Proverbs,   371;   Hebrews, 

Jeremiah  I.,  118,  342. 

146. 

5,  Psalms  HI.,  63. 

ISAIAH  XLIV.,  2,  Daniel,  180. 

6-8,  James,  59,  85;  Peter,  59; 

5,  Galatians,  456. 

John  Epistles,  154. 

8-20,  Jeremiah  I.,  22t^. 

13,  Romans,  317. 

9,   Psalms   II.,    132;    HI.,   64, 

15,  II,  Kings,  350;  Daniel,  202. 

217;  Daniel,  170. 

ISAIAH  XLIV.— ISAIAH  LV. 


163 


ISAIAH  XLIV.,  1 1,  Twelve  Proph- 

ISAIAH    XI. IX.,     I.),     Krv.I; 

ition, 

ets  I.,  259. 

12S. 

12,  Twelve  Prophets  II., 

287. 

13,  Psalms  III.,  70. 

15-17,  E.xodus,  296. 

15,  Peter,   197. 

17,  Jeremiah  I.,  175. 

2i,  Daniel,  50. 

2T„  Psalms  III.,  70. 

ISAIAH  L.,  I,  Deuteronomy, 

405; 

24,  Psalms  III.,  98;  Jeremiah, 

James,  239. 

67. 

2,  Psalms,  167. 

2S,  Ezra,  27;  Ecclcsiastes, 

43; 

ISAIAH  1. 1.,  2,  Ezckiel,  292 

Twelve  Prophets  II.,  206. 

6,  Psalms  HI.,  9S;  Peter, 

339. 

ISAIAH  XLV.,  I,  Ecclesiastes, 

43; 

9,  10,  15,  II.  Kings,  301; 

Job, 

Twelve  Prophets  II.,  206. 

1 1 ;  Daniel,  238. 

2,  Psalms  HI.,  163. 

lo.  Revelation,  270. 

7,  Chronicles,  288. 

15,  Jeremiah  II.,  355. 

13,  Jeremiah  II.,  165. 

16,  Jeremiah  I.,  71. 

. 15,  Revelation,  195. 

17,  Ephesians,  335. 

2;^,  Romans,  385. 

ISAIAH    I.II.,    7,    Romans, 

274; 

ISAIAH    XLVI.,     1,    Ecclesiastes, 

Ephesians,  416. 

62. 

9,  Psalms  III.,  70. 

3,  5,  Revelation,  221,. 

lo.  Psalms  HI.,  63,  69. 

5-7,  Jeremiah  I.,  223. 

II,  Peter,  128. 

6,  Daniel,  164. 

14,  Psalms  I.,  215. 

7,  Jeremiah  I.,  93,  218. 

ISAIAH    LIII.,    Job,    15;   Psalms 

ISAIAH  XLVII.,  1-3,  Jeremiah  I., 

I.,  222,  379. 

296. 

1,  Romans,  279. 

1-8,  Ecclesiastes,  41. 

2,  Twelve  Prophets   II., 

293; 

9,  12,  Daniel,  146. 

Romans,  16. 

10,  Jeremiah  I.,  171. 

4-6,  Song  of  Solomon,  308. 

13,  II.  Kings,  348;  Jeremiah  I., 

5,  Psalms  I.,  379;  Luke, 

37^' 

218,  226;  Daniel,  219. 

7,  Psalms  I.,  382. 

ISAIAH  XLVIII.,    I,  Jeremia 

h  I., 

10,  Psalms  I.,  218;  Mark 

294; 

^2,2. 

Peter,  180. 

10,  Jeremiah  I.,  197;  II., 

240. 

12,  Psalms  HI.,  403- 

13,  Psalms  III.,  98. 

15,  Daniel,  165. 

ISAIAH    XLIX.,    I,   2,  r.alat 

ians. 

ISAIAH  LIV.,  I,  Psalms  HI. 

20S. 

76. 

5,  Mark,  62;  Revelation, 

321. 

2,  I.  Kings,  38.S;  Psalms 

III., 

8,  Numbers,  70. 

69. 

10,  Psalms  HI.,  9«- 

6,  Chronicles,  140. 

^17,  Daniel,  220. 

8,  II.  Corinthians,  227. 

ISAIAH  LV.,  I,  Peter,  314. 

9,  Psalms  HI.,  163. 

3,  Acts  II.,  208. 

164 


ISAIAH  L  v.— I  SO  I A  TION 


ISAIAH  LV.,  9,  Jeremiah  I.,  2>^Z' 

ISAIAH  LXIIL,  9,  II.  Kings,  68; 

■ 12,    Psalms    III.,   70;   Revela- 

Song of  Solomon,  231;   Jere- 

tion, 245. 

miah  I.,  307. 

ISAIAH  LVI.,  7,  Ezra,  66. 

10,  I.  Samuel,  412;  Ephesians, 

8,  Psalms  III.,  185. 

298. 

10,  James,  416. 

13,   Psalms  HI.,    143;  Twelve 

ISAIAH  LVII.,  Jeremiah  II.,  74. 

Prophets  I.,  295. 

15,  Psalms  III.,  207. 

ISAIAH  LXI  v.,  I,  Revelation,  87. 

16,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  435. 

6,  7,  Numbers,  214. 

19,  Ephesians,  131. 

ISAIAH  LXV.,  I,  Romans,  280. 

ISAIAH    LVIII.,   2-4,   Revelation, 

2,  Romans,  281. 

255- 

8,  Revelation,  58. 

y8,  Jeremiah  II.,  35. 

10,  Joshua,  187. 

5-1 1,     13,    14,    Exodus,    309; 

16,   Jeremiah  I.,  132;  Revela- 

Mark, 65,  6^. 

tion,  33. 

ISAIAH    LIX.,    7,    Proverbs,   26; 

17,  Peter,  361. 

Romans,  86. 

ISAIAH     LXVL,     3,     Galatians, 

16,  Psalms  III.,  69. 

328. 

17,    Ephesians,    419;    Thessa- 

15,  11.  Kings,  22. 

lonians,  195;  James,  198. 

22,  Chronicles,  9. 

19,  Revelation,  213. 

ISHBI-BENOB,  11.  Samuel,  339. 

20,  21,   II.   Samuel,  400;   Ro- 

ISHBOSHETH murdered,II.  Sam- 

mans, 308. 

uel,  58. 

21,  Jeremiah  I.,  71;   II.,   ;^62. 

— set  up  by  Abner,   11.   Samuel, 

ISAIAH  LX.,  I,  Luke,  132;  Ephe- 

23- 

sians,  335. 

ISHMAEL,  Birth  of,  Genesis,  147- 

13,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  313. 

158. 

14,  Daniel,  50,  165. 

Destiny  of.  Genesis,  154. 

17,  Pastoral  Epistles,  no. 

loved    by    Abraham,    Genesis, 

ISAIAH  LXI.,  I,  Leviticus,  202. 

160. 

7,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  466. 

Paul's    interpretation    of    the 

9,  Revelation,  215. 

story.  Genesis,  220-225. 

10,  Leviticus,  215;  Revelation, 

supplanted  by   Isaac,  Genesis, 

loi,  263. 

212-225. 

ISAIAH  LXIL,  4,  Ezekiel,  333- 

ISHMAEL,  Son  of  Nethaniah,  IL 

5,  Mark,  62. 

Kings,  469-472;  Jeremiah  IL, 

6,  Psalms  II.,  434. 

183. 

12,  Psalms  III.,  159. 

ISLAND   MONASTERRIES,    Acts, 

ISAIAH  LXIIL,  3,  Revelation,  326. 

IL,  89. 

5,  Psalms  III.,  69. 

ISOLATION,  The  evil  of.  Proverb*^ 

7,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  127. 

239-249. 

ISJ^A  EL— ISRAEL 


la-i 


ISRAEL,  After  the  flesh  and  after 
the  spirit,  Matthew,  202-206. 

Allotments      of      the      tribes. 

Joshua,  25S-325. 

and  Amalek,  Exodus,  252-25S. 

and  Greece,  Isaiah  I.,  365. 

and  the  Greeks,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  439-446. 

at  Sinai,  Exodus,  270-279. 

called    "  my  people,''^    Exodus, 

51. 

chosen    by    God,    I.    Samuel, 

201. 

circumcised     at    the    Jordan, 

Joshua,  117-121. 

contrasted  with  Judah,  Jere- 
miah I.,  1 14-133. 

Conversion    of,    Ezekiel,    356- 

366. 

crossing  the  Jordan,   Joshua, 

106-116. 

David  anointed  King,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 253-264. 

Death  of  David,  I.  Kings,    14- 

I04- 

Defiant    advance    on   Canaan, 

Numbers,  174. 

demands    a    king,    I.    Samuel, 

109-120. 

disaffected  at  Kadesh,  Num- 
bers, 160. 

The  divided  Kingdom,  I.  Kings, 

269-499. 

Eighth      Century    in,    Twelve 

Prophets  I.,  31-43- 

elected  for  service,   Isaiah  II., 

22,7- 

Fall    of,     overruled,     Romans, 

294-306. 

Formation  of  the  new,  Eze- 
kiel, 285-382. 


ISRAEL,  From  the  return  to 
building  of  the  temple,  Twehe 
Prophets  IL,  198-221. 

History  from  Isaiah  to  fall  of 

Jerusalem,  Isaiah  II.,  26  35. 

a      holy      nation.       Numbers, 

25- 
idea  of  Jehovah,  Judges,   107. 

118. 
idolatrous   in   Egypt,  Exodus, 

20. 
invaded   by   the   Philistines,  I. 

Samuel,  93. 

Itinerary  of.  Numbers,  382. 

jealous    of    Jehovah,    Twelve 

Prophets  II.,  536-541. 

Jesus  a  Jew,  Isaiah  II.,  249. 

justice  in,  Deuteronomy,  ^yj- 

395- 
Kings     of,     Fable,    II.    Kings, 

495- 
little  mentioned  in  Chronicles, 

Chronicles,  2oy. 
loses  the  ark,   I.   Samuel,   6r- 

72. 

mission  of,  Judges,  13. 

missionary  career  of,  Isaiah  IL, 

44-47- 

Moses  intercedes  for.  Numbers, 

169. 

motives  for  faithfulness,  Deu- 
teronomy, 218-238. 

murmuring  for  food,  Exodus, 

232-238. 

no  enchantment  with,  Num- 
bers, 302. 

not    forsaken,    Romans,     2S2- 

293. 

not  hopeful.  Numbers,  156. 

Oppressions  of.  Judges,  72,  92, 

^i7- 


166 


ISRAEL— I YE-ABARJM 


ISRAEL,  our  mother  of  sorrows, 

ISRAEL,    subdue  the    Philistines, 

Twelve  Prophets  I.,  435-43S. 

I.  Samuel,  97-108. 

Prominence  given  to,  Isaiah  11., 

Superiority  of,  Judges,  55,  69, 

236. 

90. 

Punishment  of,  Numbers,  171. 

supernaturally       directed       in 

purity  of  race,  Numbers,  328. 

leaving  Egypt,  Joshua,  7. 

quaUties  of  nation,  Isaiah  II., 

tempted    to  idolatry,  Judges, 

244. 

Z2>- 

refused  a  way  through  Edom, 

their      advantages.    Numbers, 

Numbers,  231. 

324- 

religion  of.  Numbers,  9. 

Thick  night  of.  Twelve  Proph- 

 Religious  condition   of,  Isaiah 

ets  I.,  253-298. 

I.,  99. 

unable    to    convert.   Numbers, 

Religious  enthusiasm  of.  Num- 

319- 

bers,  353- 

under     the    Persians,    Twelve 

Restoration  foretold,  Romans, 

Prophets  II.,  187-197. 

307-320. 

See  names  of  individual  kings. 

Route    supernaturally  guided. 

ISSACHAR  and  his  father's  bless- 

Joshua, 8. 

ing,  Genesis,  437. 

Samuel  judges,  I.  Samuel,  106. 

ISSACHAR,  The  tribe,  Inheritance 

Saul  chosen   King,   I.  Samuel, 

of,  Joshua,  321,  322. 

157-168. 

Moses    blesses,    Deuteronomy, 

Separateness    of.   Numbers,    7, 

468. 

295- 

ISTHMIAN  GAMES,   Paul's  illus- 

 Seventh    Century    in,    Twelve 

tration  from  the,  I.  Corinthi- 

Prophets II.,  y2i^. 

ans,  211-226. 

Solidarity  of.  Psalms  II.,  2i'&T. 

ITALIAN  BAND,  Acts  II.,  103. 

Solomon  anointed,  I.  Kings,  89. 

ITHAMAR,    Eleazar    and.    Num- 

 Solomon  dies,   I.   Kings,   250- 

bers,   31. 

265. 

lYE-ABARIM,  Numbers,  250. 

J  A  BEL— J  A  MES 


167 


JARAI.,  Genesis,  46. 
JABKSH-GILEAl),   David   thanks 

the  men  of,  II.  Samuel,  20. 
its    men    slaughtered,   Judges, 

357- 
men  rescue  the  body  of  Saul, 

I.  Samuel,  437,  438. 

Relief  of,  I.  Samuel,  169-180, 

JABEZ,  Chronicles,  y2>. 

JABIN,    King  of  Hazor,  Joshua, 

22i^,  238;  Judges,  91. 
JACOB    afraid    of  Esau,  Genesis, 

295- 
— and  Benjamin,  Genesis,  425. 

and  Esau,  Genesis,  254-266. 

and    his    fraud,   Genesis,    267- 

278. 

and  Joseph,  Genesis,  2i'^^- 

and  Pharaoh,  Genesis,  407. 

at    Peniel,    Genesis,     293-306; 

Exodus,  7, 
blesses  Joseph's  sons.  Genesis, 

421. 
blessing  his  sons.  Genesis,  415- 

445;  Hebrews,  249,  259. 

Change  of  name,  Genesis,  303. 

Flight   and  dream  of.  Genesis, 

279-292. 
his  character  analyzed.   Gene- 
sis, 260. 

in  Egypt,  Genesis,  404Sfi. 

in  Shcchem,  Genesis,  313-315. 

Eameness  of,  Genesis,  309. 

married  to  Leah,  Genesis,  291. 


JACOB,  Prayer  of,  Genesis,  297. 

returns,  Genesis,  307-320. 

Wrestling,  Genesis,  302. 

JAEL  wife  of  Heber  the    Kenite, 

Judges,  102,  133. 
JAILOR,  The  Philippian,  Acts  II., 

286-290. 
JAMES,  The  Apostle,   Mark,  82; 

Acts  II.,    168-174;   Galatians, 

126. 
JAMES  OF  ALPHEUS,  James,  27. 
JAMES    THE    JUST,   James,   31, 

2>^,  41,  47- 

JAMES,  Bishop  of  Jerusalem,  Acts 
IL,  241,  426,  427;  Galatians, 
^•j;  James,  25-41. 

on  faith,  Hebrews,  200. 

JAMES,  The  Epistle,  and  the  say- 
ings   of   Christ,    James,    308- 

314- 
and     the    wisdom     literature, 

James,  68-79. 
and  the  writings  of  Paul   and 

Peter,  James,  55-67. 

Authenticity,  James,  13-25. 

Author  of,  James,  25-41. 

Date  of,  James,  60-62. 

Improvements      by      revisers, 

James,  57,  80,  109,  114,  118, 

119,  136,  151,  170,  175,  196, 

226,  231,  335,  409,  445,  458, 

468. 
persons    addressed   in,   James, 

42-54- 


]68 


JAMES  I.—JEHOIDA 


JAMES  I.,  2,  Romans,  229. 
—5,  Ezra,  26o\  II.  Corinthians, 
265. 

12,  Pastoral  Epistles,  369. 

i3-i5»  Proverbs,  252. 

17,  Isaiah  I.,  449, 

18,  Leviticus,  461;  Revelation, 

245- 
21,    Peter,   64;  John  Epistles, 

309- 

26,  Proverbs,  177. 

27,  Ezra,  105,  204. 

JAMES  IL,  5,  Revelation,  48. 

6,  7,  Acts  II. ,  27. 

7,  Ezekiel,  335. 

8,  Galatians,  341. 

II,  Exodus,  281. 

17,   18,  Hebrews,  201. 

19,    Romans,    115;   Galatians, 

220;  Hebrews,  223;  Peter,  289; 
Revelation,  248. 

23,  Galatians,  186. 

25,  Joshua,  159. 

JAMES  III.,  I,  Leviticus,  124. 

2,  Ephesians,  246. 

5,  6,  Peter,  123. 

6,  Proverbs,  166. 

9,  Mark,  329. 

——II,  Exodus,  229. 

17,  Philippians.  41. 

JAMES  IV.,  2,  Song  of  Solomon, 
208. 

3,  Peter,  167. 

4,  Revelation,  224. 

5,  Galatians,  349. 

II,  Peter,  63. 

'^y^li  John  Epistles,  154. 

JAMES  v.,  5,  Peter,  304- 

7,  Philippians,  2i'2-7\  John  Epis- 
tles, 211. 

8,  Peter,  163. 


312- 


2^2- 


JAMES  v.,   16,  Song  of  Solomon, 

17,    Daniel,    2iy,    Revelation, 

182. 

20,  John  Epistles,  309. 

JANNES  AND  JAMBRES,  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  379-383- 

JASHER,  The  book,  Joshua,  229. 

JASHOBEAM,  II.  Samuel,  343. 

JEALOUSY,  Genesis,  ^y,  James, 
198. 

among   leaders,    Judges,    122- 

124. 

Godly,    II.    Corinthians, 

324- 
of    Divine    love,    James, 

237. 

of  God,  Exodus,  298. 

Ordeal  of.  Numbers,  57. 

Saul's,  I.  Samuel,  292-299. 

to  what  it  leads.  Genesis,  35. 

Water  of,  Numbers,  56. 

when    superseded,    I.    Samuel, 

134- 
JEBB,  Bishop  John,  Acts  II.,  99. 
JEBUSITES,  Judges,  28. 
JECONIAHor  Jehoiachin,  King  of 

Judah,  Jeremiah  II.,  80-95. 
captured    by    Nebuchadnezzer, 

Deuteronomy,  349. 

Reign  of,  II.  Kings,  431-436. 

JEHOAHAZ,    King   of  Israel,   II. 

Kings,  175-178- 
JEHOAHAZ,  King  of  Judah,  II. 

Kings,   411-430;   Jeremiah   I., 

2-]\  II.,  3-9:  Ezekiel,  106. 
JEHOIAKIM,  I]    Kings,  416-430; 

Jeremiah    I.,    28;    IL,    65-79; 

Daniel,  123. 
JEHOIDA  and  Joash,   IL  Kings, 

149-158;  Chronicle,  406, 


JEHORA  M—JEREMIA  H 


169 


JEHORAM,     Kin<;    of   Israel,    II. 

Kings,  29,  81. 

Death  of,  II.  Kings,  118. 

JEHORAM,    King   of  Judah,    II. 

Kings,      99-102;      Chronicles, 

393-398- 
JEHOSAPIIAT,  King  of  Judah,  I. 

^•"gs,     Z^lll^'f    Chronicles, 

366-392;  Psalms  II..  432. 
alliance  with  Ahab,  II.  Kings, 

3- 
visits    Ahab,    I.    Kings,    485- 

487. 
JEHOSAPHAT,   The  recorder,  II. 

Samuel,  128. 
JEHOSHEBA    outwits    Athaliah, 

II.  Kings,  148. 
JEHOVAH,  All  time  dedicated  to, 

Numbers,  347. 
and  the  nations,  Jeremiah  II., 

21 1-219. 

Authority  of.  Numbers,  7. 

the  champion  of  Israel,  Joshua, 

Character     of,    Joshua,    393- 

395. 

communicates       with      Moses, 

Numbers,  144. 

Final  victory  of,  Ezekiel,  367- 

380. 

Forbearance  of.  Numbers,  255. 

• Guardian,  Numbers.  68. 

■ has  regard  for  his  name,  Eze- 
kiel, 357-360. 

His    call    to    Israel,   Numbers, 

123. 

His     "Similitude,"    Numbers, 

146. 

Ideal  worshipper  of.  Psalms  I., 

— — in  pillar  of  cloud,  Numbers,  91. 


JEHOVAH,  Israel's  jealousy  of. 
Twelve  Prophets  II.,  536- 
541- 

King  and  judge.  Numbers,  5. 

- — The  name,  Exodus,  56;  Leviti- 
cus, 482;  Chronicles,  ^-j ; 
Psalms  I.,  69. 

pardons  but  punishes.  Num- 
bers, 170. 

protector  of  Israel,   Numbers, 

117. 

revealed    to    Moses,   Numbers, 

335. 

Worship  of,  Numbers,  295. 

JEHU,  son   of  Hanani,   I.   Kings, 

331;  II.  Kings,  39. 
and    Jehosaphat,    Chronicles, 

371- 
and    Jonadab,    Deuteronomy, 

322*  II.  Kings,  134. 

anointed,  II.  Kings,  no. 

Dynasty    of,    II.    Kings,    175- 

192. 
End  of  the  reign  of,  II.  Kings, 

145- 
established  on  the  throne,  II. 

Kings,  125-130. 
extirpates     Baal-worship,     II. 

Kings,  131-145- 

Revolt  of,  II.  Kings,  106-124. 

JELLETT,  J.  H.,  James,  211. 
JEPHTHAH,  Judges,  234. 

Faith  of,  Hebrews,  261. 

Lament  of.  Judges,  265. 

Vow    of.    Judges,   239-253;   I. 

Kings,  116. 
JERAHMEEL,     Descendants     of. 

Chronicles,  50. 
JEREMIAH  and  Christ,  Jeremiah 

and  Ezekiel,  Ezekiel,  13-25. 


170 


JEREMIA  H—JERKMIA  f/  VI. 


JEREaMIAH  and  his  prophesies, 
II.  Kings,  449-456. 

and  his  work  of  reform,  Deuter- 
onomy, 46. 

and    the   Servant  of  the  Lord, 

Isaiah  II.,  42,  275,  2yj. 

as    a    sin     bearer,    Isaiah    II., 

352,  358. 

the    author    of   Deuteronomy, 

Deuteronomy,  225. 

Call  and  consecration  of,  Jere- 
miah I.,  58-73. 

characteristic  expressions, 

Jeremiah  II.,  269. 

goes  to  Egypt,   Jeremiah  II., 

187-196. 

imprisoned,  Jeremiah  I.,  48,  50. 

Imprisonment  of,  Jeremiah  II., 

155-171- 

in  hiding,  II.  Kings,  428. 

in  the  miry    pit,    Psahns    II., 

297. 
Isaiah  and,  on  the  exile,  Isaiah 

II.,  27. 
Life  and  times  of,  Jeremiah  I., 

1-57- 

persecuted,  II.  Kings,  474 ;  Jere- 
miah I.,  411-424. 

prediction  of  exile,  Isaiah  II., 

8,  27,  66,  79. 

predicts  a  new  covenant,  He- 
brews, 138. 

a  priest,  Jeremiah  I.,  i. 

rebukes  Jehoiakim,  II.  Kings, 

419. 

remains  in  Jerusalem,  II.  Kings, 

462. 

Roll  of,  Jeremiah  II.,  28-43. 

suffering  for  God's  word,  Isaiah 

II.,  330. 

Tenderness  of,  Jeremiah  I.,  336. 


JEREMIAH  tried  for  heresy,  Jere- 
miah II.,  10-27. 
JEREMIAH,   Greek   Epistle,   Jere- 
miah I.,  220. 
JEREMIAH  I.,  5,  Galatians,  75. 
• 6,   I.   Kings,    125;    II.    Corin- 
thians, 294. 
JEREMIAH   II.,    1-35,   II.   Kings, 
376. 

2,  Ezekiel,  185;  Mark,  62. 

3,  Ezekiel,  379. 

8,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  69. 

10,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  14. 

II,  Psalms  HI.,  145. 

16,  II.  Kings,  474. 

21,  Ezekiel,   128. 

2T^,  II.  Kings,  389. 

2-j,  Chronicles,  95. 

30,  James,  294. 

34,  Proverbs,  26. 

36,  Chronicles,  355. — 

JEREMIAH  HI.,  i,  James.  239. 

i-ii,  Song  of  Solomon,  45. 

5,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  435. 

6-13,  Ezekiel,  190. 

12,  Psalms  HI.,  431. 

15,  16,  II.  Kings,  441. 

19,  Psalms  HI.,  146. 

JEREMIAH    IV.,    6,    II.     Kings, 

7-^7,  II-  Kings,  2>77- 

10,  II,  Kings,  409. 

13,  Song  of  Solomon,  298. 

19,  Revelation,  313. 

JEREMIAH  v.,  15-17,  II.  Kings, 

?>77- 

24,  James,  293. 

30,  31,  II-  Kings,  Z72>- 

31,  I.  Kings,  418. 

JEREMIAH     VI.,     I,    22-24,    II- 


JEREMIAH  VI.— JEREMIAH  XIX. 


171 


JEREMIAH  VI.,  13-15,  II.  Kin^s, 
i7i\  Sons  of  Solomon,  278. 

14,   II.   Kings,  450;    Song    of 

Solomon,  279. 

20,  II.  Kings,  3<)6. 

JEREMIAH  VII.,  4,  8  15,  II. 
Kings,  397,  44 1  ;  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  25. 

7,  Twelve  Proj)lu"ts,  248. 

10,  Romans,   19S. 

12,  I.  Samuel,  y  T,;  Chronicles, 

297. 

18,     II.     Kings,    361;    Twelve 

Prophets  II.,  38. 

21,  II.  Kings.  396. 

22,     I.     Kings,     213;    Twelve 

Prophets  I.,  104. 

2T,,    Exodus,    310;   II.   Kings, 

396. 

31,  Leviticus,  387. 

JEREMIAH  VIII.,  I,  James,  239. 

2,  II.  Kings,  361. 

8,     II.     Kings,    441;    Twelve 

Prophets  II.,  25. 

10,  Song  of  Solomon,  278. 

II,   II.   Kings,  450;    Song    of 

Solomon,  279. 

18,  Song  of  Solomon,  y?,. 

JEREMIAH  IX.,  I,  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, yS. 

2,     Psalms    II.,    160;    Twelve 

Prophets  II.,  140. 

15,  Revelation,  142. 

24,  Romans,  47. 

3)3^      Twelve     Prophets      II., 

1 1 1. 

JEREMIAH  X.,    13,   Psalms  HI., 

364. 

19,  Psalms  II.,  T^yy. 

23,  Psalms  I.,  2>y7- 

3Z,.  Psalms  II.,  397. 


JEREMIAH  XI..  3.   4.    II.    Kings, 

393- 

19-21,  II.  Kings,  463. 

JEREMIAH  XII.,  5,  II.  Kings. 
420. 

6,  II.  Kings,  463. 

13,  Jeremiah,  211. 

JEREMIAH  XIII.,  27,  Ezekiel,  209. 

JEREMIAH  XIV.,  7,  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 315. 

9,  James,   129. 

14,  Peter,  285. 

18,  Song  of  Solomon,  315. 

21,  Song  of  Solomon,  204. 

JEREMIAH  XV.,  1-9,  II.  Kings, 
370. 

4,  Ezekiel,  23. 

10-21,  II.  Kings,  466;  Chroni- 
cles, 267. 

15,  Psalms  II.,  299. 

16,  Ezekiel,  48;  James,  129. 

JEREMIAH  XVI.,  5,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  155. 

7,  Ezekiel,  210. 

13,  Psalms  HI.,  421. 

18,  Revelation,  307. 

JEREMIAH  XVII.,  i,  H.  Corin- 
thians, no. 

1-4,  II.  Kings,  394. 

9,    Leviticus,   344;   H.   Kings, 

394;  Song  of  Solomon,  ^^^2; 
Romans,  Sy,  371. 

15,  Peter,  331. 

21,  John  I.,  183. 

24,  25,  E.xodus,  309. 

JEREMIAH  XVIIL,  23,  Proverbs, 

315- 
JEREMIAH  XIX.,  Matthew,  415. 
— ^5,  Leviticus,  387. 

9,  II.  Kings,  yS. 

13,  II.  Kings,  361. 


372 


JEREMIAH  XX.— JEREMIAH  XXXI. 


JEREMIAH  XX.,  i,  Ezekiel,  437. 

JEREMIAH    XXV.,     35,     Psalms 

1-12,  I.  Kings,  413. 

III.,  407- 

2,  II.  Kings,  432. 

JEREMIAH  XXVI.,   6,  II.  Kings, 

7,  8,  II.  Kings,  410. 

425;  Chronicles,  297. 

JEREMIAH  XXI.,  i, Twelve  Proph- 

 7,  Song  of  Solomon,  27S. 

ets  II.,  47. 

8-24,  II.  Kings,  300. 

Ill,  II.  Kings,  448. 

9,  I.  Samuel,  yT,. 

6,  Deuteronomy,  430. 

20-23,  II.  Kings,  421. 

JEREMIAH     XXII.,      10-12,     II. 

22,  II.  Kings,  432. 

Kings,  415;  Ezekiel,  107. 

24,   II.   Kings,   467;    Song    of 

10,  18,  II.  Kings,  408. 

Solomon,  St,. 

II,  II.  Kings,  411. 

JEREMIAH  XXVII.,  1-8, H.  Kings, 

13-17,  H.  Kings,  419;  Twelve 

442. 

Prophets  II.,  28,  146;  James, 

1-19,  Daniel,  81. 

281. 

3,  Ezekiel,  260. 

15,  16,  II.  Kings,  398;  Twelve 

6,  II.  Kings,  435;  Ezra,  20. 

Prophets  II.,  26. 

7,  Daniel,  151. 

17,   Proverbs,  26;  Peter,  306. 

JEREMIAH      XXVIII.,       Deuter- 

 2T„  II.  Kings,  419. 

onomy,  349. 

24-30,  II.  Kings,  433. 

II,  II.  Kings,  443. 

JEREMIAH  XXIII.,    1-4,   Ezekiel, 

JEREMIAH  XXIX.,   2,  II.  Kings, 

309. 

433. 

5,  Isaiah  II.,  346. 

3,  Song  of  Solomon,  S^. 

6,  II.  Kings,  437;  Chronicles, 

4-7,  Ecclesiastes,  2i7- 

144;  Romans,  263. 

9,  I.  Kings,  418. 

II,  14,  Song  of  Solomon,  278. 

10,  Ezra,  19. 

18,  Romans,  317. 

21-23,  II.  Kings,  444. 

23,  II.  Kings,  419. 

22,  Daniel,  44,  180. 

24,  Ephesians,  93. 

25,    29,   Twelve  Prophets  II., 

29,  II.  Kings,  444. 

47- 

31-33,  II.  Kings,  441. 

26,     II.     Kings,    432;    Daniel, 

JEREMIAH  XXIV.,  7,  Psalms  II., 

30;  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  28. 

136. 

JEREMIAH    XXX.,    4-1 1,   Daniel, 

JEREMIAH    XXV.,   9»   ".   Kings, 

319- 

425,  435- 

9,  Isaiah  II.,  404. 

'lo,  Ecclesiastes,  269. 

10,  Isaiah  XL,  244. 

II,  12,  Ezra,  19. 

JEREMIAH  XXXL,  i,  9,  II.  Cor- 

 12,  Daniel,  49;  Twelve  Proph- 

inthians, 247. 

ets  II.,  283. 

1-34,  II.  Kings,  449. 

22,  Ezekiel,  260. 

12,  Isaiah  II.,  420. 

26,  Daniel,  200. 

15-17,  II.  Kings,  466. 

JEREMIAH  XXXI.— JEREMIAH  XLIX. 


173 


JEREMIAH     XXXI.,    27,    Daniel, 

JEREMIAH      XXXIX.,      3,      11. 

157- 

Kmgs,  331;  Daniel,   51,  127. 

31,   32,   II.    Kings,    397;    He- 

 4,  5,  Song  of  Solomon,  298. 

brews,  138. 

9,  Ezekiel,  287. 

2t:S^  34,  n.  Kings,  441 ;  Ezekiel, 

JEREMIAH  XL.,  5,  Song  of  Solo- 

364; Acts  I.,  84. 

mon,   ^T^. 

34'  John  Epistles,  167 

12,  II.  Kings,  467. 

JEREMIAH    XXXII  ,    7,    Acts  I., 

JEREMIAH   XLL,    i,    II.   Kings, 

217. 

468. 

19,  Daniel,  151 ;  Twelve  Proph- 

 8,  II.  Kings,  462. 

ets  II.,  480. 

17,  Luke,  76. 

— ^21,  Deuteronomy,  301. 

27,  I.  Kings,  95. 

39,  Psalms  II.,  466. 

JEREMIAH  XLII.,  6,  7,  I.  Kings, 

JEREMIAH    XXXIII.,     14-26,    I. 

20. 

Kings,  213. 

7,  Song  of  Solomon,  81. 

15,  Chronicles,  144. 

JEREMIAH  XLIII.,  4,  7,  Song  of 

15  17,  Ezekiel,  316. 

Solomon,  156. 

JEREMIAH     XXXIV.,    8-1 1,    II. 

13.  n.  Kings,  474. 

Kings,  438. 

JEREMIAH  XLIV.,  17,  H.  Kings, 

JEREMIAH     XXXV.,      1-19,     II. 

292. 

Kings,  133. 

JEREMIAH  XLV.,  1-5,  II.  Kings, 

6,  7,  Deuteronomy,  323. 

426. 

19,  Deuteronomy,  323. 

5,  Ezra,  193. 

JEREMIAH XXXVI.,  i,  Daniel,  46. 

JEREMIAH  XLVI.,i-i2,ILKings, 

12,  II.  Kings,  469. 

423- 

26,  II.  Kings,  427. 

2,  Daniel,  46. 

29,  II.  Kings,  425. 

10,  Peter,  z^y. 

JEREMIAH  XXXVII.,  3,  H.  Kings, 

27,  Isaiah  II.,  244. 

447;  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  47. 

JEREMIAH  XLVII.,  6,  IL  Kings, 

5-7,  Ezekiel,  264. 

435- 

7,  8,  Song  of  Solomon,  292. 

JEREMIAH  XLVIIL,   11,  Twelve 

11-15,  II.  Kings,  451. 

Prophets  II.,  285. 

21,  II    Kings,  452. 

13,  H.  Kings,  191. 

30,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  30. 

29,  42,  Isaiah  I.,  274;  Ezekiel, 

JEREMIAH     XXXVIII.,     5.      H. 

226. 

Kings,  439,  451. 

45,  Numbers,  309. 

6,  Song  of  Solomon,  250. 

JEREMIAH  XLIX.,  i,  Ezekiel,  225. 

9,  II.  Kmgs,  452. 

7,  Ezekiel,  227;  Twelve  Proph- 

10.  II.  Kings,  455. 

-   ets  IL,  182. 

JEREMIAH  XXXIX.,  2,  II.  Kings, 

9,    16,   Twelve   Prophets   IL, 

468. 

167. 

174 


JEREMIA  H  XLIX.  —JER  USA  LEM. 


JEREMIAH  XLIX.,  19,11.  Kings, 

255- 

28,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  23. 

JEREMIAH  L.,  2,  Ecclesiastes,  62. 

16,  John  Epistles,  183. 

20,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  435. 

Zli  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  iii. 

44,  II.  Kings,  255. 

JEREMIAH    LL,    4,    Isaiah     II., 

363. 

16,  Psalms  III.,  364. 

25,  Revelation,  141. 

28-57,  Daniel,  220. 

30,   Twelve  Prophets  II.,  iii. 

2,2>,  Daniel,  153. 

39>    57>  Twelve  Prophets  II., 

112. 

58,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  146. 

59,  II.  Kings,  426. 

JEREMIAH  LIL,   2,   3,    Song    of 

Solomon,  81. 

24,  Twelve  Prophets,  II.,  47. 

28-30,  Daniel,  46. 

JERICHO,   Character  of,  Joshua, 

133- 

Christ  passes  through,  Mat- 
thew, 292-295. 

Elisha  at,  II.  Kings,  26. 

Fate  of,  Joshua,  140-152. 

Plan  for  taking,  Joshua,  136. 

The  spies  in,  Joshua,  82-94. 

Treatment  of,  Joshua,  149. 

JEROBOAM,  Son  of  Nebat,  I. 
Kings,  254-259, 

chosen  King  of  the  ten  tribes, 

I.  Kings,  273. 

Reign  of,  I.  Kings,  286-308. 

JEROBOAM  II.,  II.  Kings,  187- 
192. 

JEROME,  Acts  I.,  X,  xii,  6,  no, 
194,  386J  XL,  4>  6,  84,  141, 


251;  Pastoral  Epistles,  230, 
260;  James,  7,  31,  366,  369; 
John  Epistles,  viii,  13,  51,  91. 

JERUSALEM,  Judges,  1 5  ;  II.  Sam- 
uel, 68;  Psalms  III.,  313; 
Isaiah  I.,  22,  25  sq.,  169  sq., 
211  sq.,  231,  243,  267,  279, 
368-374;  II.,  30,  43'  47.  7^, 
3S2,  395. 

Appeal  of.   Song  of  Solomon, 

120-131,  144-155- 

becomes  the  Capital,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 70. 

belongs  to  all  time,   I.   Kings, 

67. 

besieged    b}'    Sennacherib,    II. 

Kings,  34r. 

the  bride  of  God,   Isaiah    II., 

397- 
Christ  goes  to,  Matthew,  286- 

304- 

The  church  of,  Hebrews,  5,  85. 

City  of  judgment,   Isaiah  II., 

466. 
Contrasts,   Song  of  Solomon, 

265-279. 
David  flees  from,   II.   Samuel, 

229-252. 
Desolation    of,    Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 97,  107. 
destroyed,      Ecclesiastes,     35; 

Song  of  Solomon,  ^y. 
Destruction     of,    Mark,    349; 

James,    128,   276,  407;  Peter, 

124. 

Fall  of,  II.  Kings,  457-464. 

Fate  of,  Jeremiah  I.,  316. 

First    reception   of  Christ  by, 

Matthew,  16-18. 

Heavenly,  Hebrews,   153. 

Holy  City,  Ezra,  2)\7-2i^7' 


JER  USA  LEM—JES  US  CHRIS  T. 


175 


JERL'SALKM,   an     iik-.il    history. 

Ezckiel,  126-142. 
its      destruction      prophesied, 

Ezekiel,  57-214. 
Jesus    discussed    in.    John    I., 

239-255. 
Jesus  rejected  in,  John  I.,  2S5- 

299. 
Judah   versus.   Twelve   Proj)!!- 

ets  II.,  478-481. 
Nehemiah  rebuilds,  Ezra,  210- 

246. 

The  New,  Revelation,  360-374. 

Paul  at,  Galatians,  83-90. 

Paul's  collections  for  thesaints, 

I.   Corinthians,  387-399. 
The  results  of  the  deliverance 

of,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  481- 

485. 

The  return  of  David,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 289-300. 

Royal    entry    into,     Matthew, 

295-306;  Mark,  399-303- 

Taken   by  David,   II.   Samuel, 

69. 

Vain  hopes  of,  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 288-299. 

Water  supply  of,  I.  Kings,  225. 

J  ESHUA,  The  high-priest,  Ezra,  4 1 , 

43- 
JESTING,      Foolish,      Ephesians, 

302,  303. 
JESUITS,  Acts  I.,  152. 
JESUS    CHRIST,    Isaiah    I.,    80, 

142  sq.,  254  sq.,  328,  426. 
Acceptance     of,    Genesis,    62; 

John  L,  292-296. 
Adoration    of  the    shepherds, 

Luke,  67-79. 
\\\  problems  solved  in,  Judges, 

418. 


JESUS  CHRIST  alone    suHlcient, 

Exodus,  294. 
and     .Ad.im,     Romans,       143- 

•5  5- 
-and   the   angels,    Hebrews,  21- 

46. 
and  the  barren  fig  tree,  Mark, 

303-307- 

and  Beelzebub,  Mark,  91-104. 

and  the  children,  Matthew,  252- 

258;  270-273. 
and  the  cities ofrefuge,  Joshua, 

and  the  common  people.  Twelve 

Prophets  I.,  415. 
and   the  disciples,   Mark,  247- 

254;  Luke,  190-192,  280-293. 
and  the  forty  days.    Acts    I., 

23-42. 
and   the  Gentiles,   Mark,    195- 

200. 
and  God's  purpose  concerning 

the  world.  Genesis,  14. 
and  His  blood  a  plea  for  mercy, 

Genesis,  40. 
and  His  bride,  Ephesians,  366- 

379- 

and  Isaiah  liii,  Isaiah  II.,  2>^6. 

and  Joseph,  Genesis,  336,  353. 

and  Joshua,  Joshua,  20,  248, 

325- 

and  prayer,  Luke,  177-194. 

and  purity,  Mark,  190-194. 

and    rewards,    Matthew,    279- 

285. 

and  the  rich  young  man,  Mat- 
thew, 2-jy2-ji)\  Mark,  274- 
281. 

jind  the  Sabbath,  Mark,  66-70. 

and  the  Sadducees,  Mark,  330- 


176                    JESUS  CHRIST— 

JESUS  CHJUST. 

JESUS     CHRIST    and    the    say- 

JESUS CHRIST   baptized,     Mat- 

ings   of    James,    James,  308- 

thew,     31-38;      Mark,      6-13; 

314. 

Luke,  96-104. 

and  the  shadow  of  the  cross, 

before    Pilate,    Matthew,   416- 

Matthew,  142-172. 

420;   Mark,     418-424;     Luke, 

and        the       Syro-phoenician 

391-393;  John  II.,  295-317. 

woman,  Matthew,  206-210. 

beginning  of  the  Gospel,  Mark, 

and  tradition,  Mark,  184-189. 

1-5- 

and  the  tribute  money,  Mark, 

begins  His  Galilean   ministry. 

325-330. 

Matthew,    48-56;   Luke,     128- 

and    the    woman   of  Samaria, 

147. 

John  I.,  129-143. 

bequest    of    peace,    John    II., 

and  the  woman  taken  in  adul- 

157-171- 

tery,  John  I.,  257-270. 

born  in  Bethlehem,  Luke,  62. 

announces  his  departure,  John 

brand  of,  Galatians,  448-459. 

II.,  107-119. 

bread    of    life,    Exodus,    247; 

anointed    by  Mary,   Matthew, 

John  I.,  207-222. 

382-284;  Mark,  359-363- 

brother.  Exodus,  19. 

Anointed  One,  Leviticus,  203. 

callsthe first  disciple,  Matthew, 

anointing    of  the    feet,    Luke, 

52-56;  Mark,  17-20;  Luke,  162- 

209-224;  John  II.,  1-16. 

176;  John  I.,  53-60. 

appears  at  the  sea  of  Gahlee, 

Captives    of,    II.   Corinthians, 

John  II.,  381-396. 

84-98. 

arrest  of,   Matthew,  403-407; 

Character  of,  Ephesians,  288. 

Mark,    401-406;    Luke,    381; 

cleanses    the  temple,  John  I., 

John  II.,  261-271. 

85-98. 

as    a   bringer    of  good    news. 

Coming  of,  Matthew,  1-12;  He- 

Isaiah II.,  439. 

brews,   195. 

as  creator,  Hebrews,  9. 

comprehension,          Ephesians, 

as  first  begotten,  Hebrews,  26. 

183-196. 

as   an   ideal  only,   John   Epis- 

 Confession  of,  Mark,  216-221. 

tles,  48. 

conflictinthe  temple,  Matthew, 

as  leader,  Hebrews,  2i^. 

?iO^-Z7i^\  Mark,  307-310. 

as  theocratic  King,   Hebrews, 

crisis  in  Galilee,  Matthew,  186- 

26,  179. 

218;  John  L,  223-238. 

Ascension,  Matthew,  446-450; 

Crucifixion  of,  Psalms  I.,  210- 

Mark,  442-445- 

225;  Matthew,  376-428  ;Mark, 

ascension  of.  Acts  I.,  43-60. 

424-431;  Luke,  376,  396-399; 

attractive    force  of  the  cros<=. 

John,  319-347- 

John  II.,  45-61. 

Cup  and  baptism,  Mark,  287- 

authority  of,  Chronicles,  302. 

292. 

JESUS  CHRIST— JESUS  CHRIST 


m 


JESUS  CHRIST,  David's  Lord, 
Mark,  34^-343- 

Day    of,    Thessalonians.     185- 

200. 

Dead    in,    Thessalonians,    169- 

184. 

Death    of,    Mark,  431-436;   I. 

Corinthians.  42-45;  Galatians, 
153-160;  Hebrews,  :i7,  93. 

. declares  Himself,  John  I.,  145- 

158. 

Denial  of.  I.  Samuel,  119. 

Did  Balaam  prophesy  of?  Num- 
bers, 310. 

• — Discerning  scribe  and,  Mark, 
337-340. 

disciples  sent  forth,  Matthew, 

132-141. 

' discussed  in  Jerusalem,  John  I., 

239-255- 

Divinity  of.  Pastoral  Epistles, 

268,  269,  283,  429. 

doctrme of  offences,  Mark,  254- 

262. 

Effects  of  the  peace,  word,  and 

name  of,  Colossians,  320-334. 

effulgence  of  God's  glory,  He- 
brews, 12. 

emancipator.  Exodus,  53,  282. 

. emptied  Himself^    Philippians, 

217-220. 

entry  into  Jerusalem,  John  H., 

i;-28. 

Epiphanies  of.   Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 260,  269. 
Example     of,      Romans,   393- 

399- 
exerted      personal      influence, 

John  Epistles,  1 18-132. 
Experience  of  all  culminates  in, 

Exodus,  81. 


JESrS  CHRIST,  Faith  in,  fun- 
damental,   Matthew,  221-227. 

The  Father  seen  in,  John   II., 

135-156. 

The  Father's  gifts  through,  Co- 
lossians, 5469. 

Following,  John  I.,  236-238. 

foot  washing,  John  II.,  Tl'&Z. 

forty  days,  Matthew,  438-446. 

foundation  of  the  church,   II. 

Corinthians,  35-46. 

founding  of  the  church,  Mat- 
thew, 219-250. 

Friends  of,  Mark,  99-104. 

Friendship  of,  I.  Samuel,  2»^Z'i 

II.  Samuel,  65,  349. 

Fulness  of  God  in,  Colossians, 

194,  198. 

Glory  of,  Colossians,  70-84. 

God's  will  first  with  Him,Isaiah 

II.,  298. 

goes    to  Jerusalem,   Matthew, 

286-304;  Mark,  299-303. 

good  shepherd,  John  I.,  319- 

334- 
great  high  priest,  Hebrews,  68- 

79. 

great  interpreter.  Genesis,  353. 

great  shepherd,  Hebrews,  328. 

healer.  Numbers,  249. 

heir  of  Abraham,  Genesis,  163. 

His  example  of  service,  Isaiah 

II.,  284,  285,  305. 

His  reception.  Matthew,  13-23. 

His  testimony  as  to  his  unique- 
ness, Isaiah  II.,  283,  369. 

His  trust  in  God,  Hebrews,  40. 

historical.  Numbers,  ?>'&. 

in  Egypt,  Matthew,  21. 

in  Gethsemane,  Matthew,  398- 

403;  Mark,  389-401. 


178 


JESUS  CHRIST— JESUS  CHRIST. 


JESUS  CHRIST  in  solitude,  Mark, 

JESUS   CHRIST,    Miracles  of,  not 

38-41- 

creative.  Exodus,  125. 

incapable  of  sin,  Hebrews,  72. 

more  worthy  than  Moses,  He- 

 Incarnation  of,  John  I.,  3-17. 

brews,  55. 

intercessory  prayer,   John  II., 

name,  Matthew,  10,  12. 

243-260. 

New  covenant    ratified  in  the 

James'  idea  of,    James,    iii- 

death  of,  Hebrews,  158-178. 

119. 

Not    servants    but    friends  of. 

Jeremiah    and,    Jeremiah    II., 

John  II.,  191-201. 

2^(^r?>72- 

on    mount    Zion,     Revelation, 

a  Jew,  Isaiah  II.,  249. 

238-245. 

Knowledge      of,      Philippians, 

our  King,  Proverbs,  331. 

199-216. 

our  passover,   I.   Corinthians, 

Lamb  of  God,  Exodus,  267. 

120-127. 

Last  days  in  Perea,  Matthew, 

our  thank  offering,  Leviticus, 

267-2%^. 

148. 

Last    words    at    Capernaum, 

our     wisdom,    Proverbs,    22, 

Matthew,  249-266. 

128. 

Last  words  of,  John  II.,   22y- 

Parables    of,    Matthew,     173- 

242. 

185;  Mark,  105-129. 

life  giver  and  judge,   John  I., 

Piety  of,  Hebrews,  -j-j. 

189-205. 

Preaching  of.  Job,  276. 

light,  Numbers,  ?i2)- 

Pre-existence  of,  John  II.,  234, 

light  of  the   world,    John    I., 

235- 

271-283. 

Preparation  for.  Job,  265,  404. 

Lord's  supper  instituted,  Mat- 

 Priesthood  of,  Mark,  445,  446. 

thew,     392-395;    ^lark,    374- 

Prophecy    on    the    Mount    of 

383. 

OHves,      Matthew,      339-375; 

Martyrs  for  the  word  of  God, 

Mark,  346-358. 

Isaiah  II.,  285,  331. 

prophesied  by  Jacob,  Genesis, 

Measure  of  the  gift  of,   Ephe- 

434. 

sians,  227-243. 

purpose       of      reconciliation, 

Measure  of  the  love  of,  II.  Cor- 

Colossians, 100-115. 

inthians,  186-197. 

Reception  of,  John  I.,  21-31. 

Meditation  of.  Job,  121. 

Reconciliation    of,   Colossians, 

meets  our  needs,  Ecclesiastes, 

85-99- 

332-335- 

Redeemer,  Job,  242,  404. 

Mind  of,  Philippians,  95-1 30- 

Rejected    in  his  own  country, 

Miracles     of,    Matthew,     105- 

Mark,  162-166. 

131;    Mark,    24-38,    129-161; 

Rejected  in  Jerusalem,  John  I., 

Luke,  255-280. 

285-299. 

JES  US  CHRIS  T—JE  TlfR  O 


179 


JKSUS  CHRIS  r  requires  submis- 
sion. Genesis,  380. 

Results  of  the  high  priesthood 

of,  Hebrews,  182-195. 

Results  of  the  death   of,  John 

II..  55-61. 

Results    of   his   manifestation, 

John  II.,  63-71. 

Resurrection,    Matthew,    429- 

438;  Mark,  437-441;  Luke, 
400-415;  John  II.,  349-362. 

Resurrection  of,  I.  Corinthi- 
ans, 325-354. 

The  resurrection   and  the  life, 

John  I.,  351-367- 

Reticence  of  the  records,  Mat- 
thew, 13-15. 

Return  of,  Hebrews,  188. 

revealed  as  a  son,  Hebrews,  3- 

17. 
- — revealer  of  God,  Numbers,  92. 
Rock,    I.    Corinthians,      22,y 

235. 
Sacrifice    of,    Genesis,    T)6,   66; 

Judges,  251;  Job,  62. 
the  scape-goat,  John   I.,  369- 

386. 
The    Sermon    on    the    Mount, 

Matthew,  57-104. 
Servant  of  the  Lord  by  Paul 

after,  Isaiah  II.,  287. 
Servant  of  the  Lord  in  Acts, 

Isaiah  II.,  286. 

Sin-bearing  of.  Numbers,  126. 

slain   for  us,  Leviticus,  44  sc|. 

Sole  headship  of.  Numbers,  210. 

the  Son  of  God,  John  I.,  335- 

349- 

Sonship  of,  John  I.,  197. 

Spirit  of,  and  the  flesh,  Gala- 

tians,  347-360. 


JESUS  CHRIST,  The  Spirit  wit- 
nesses to,  John  II.,  203-225. 

Spotless  victim,  Hebrews,  56. 

—sulilered  outside  the  gate,  Levit- 
icus, 148. 

Teaching       with      authority, 

Mark,  20-23. 

Temptation   of,  Deuteronomy, 

205,  206;  Matthew,  39-47; 
Mark,  13-16;  Luke,  105- 
127. 

Testimony  of  John  the  Bap- 
tist, John  I.,  33-52. 

Testimony  to  the  Pentateuch, 

Leviticus,  9  sq. 

Transfiguration    of,   Matthew, 

232-242;  Mark,  228-235; 
Luke,  190-192,   280-293. 

Trial  before  the  Council,  Mat- 
thew, 407-4 1 o,  4 1 2  ;  Mark,  407- 
413;  Luke,  zSt,,  387-390. 

The  true  leader.  Numbers,  109. 

true  man,  Hebrews,   167. 

typified  by  David,   I.  Samuel, 

261,  427;  H.  Samuel,  65,  349. 

typified  in  Jacob's  dream.  Gen- 
esis, 287. 

Unchangeable,  Hebrews,  164. 

unites  all  revelations  of  God, 

Hebrews,  8. 

use  of  Jonah,  Twelve  Prophets 

II.,  507-509. 

Victory  of,  Ezra,  404. 

Way,  the  truth,   and  the  life, 

John  IL,  121-133. 

What  God  wrought  in,  Ephe- 

sians,  81-94. 
JESUS  WHICH  IS  CALLED  JUS- 
TUS, Colossians,  389. 
JETHRO,  Exodus,  259-263;  Num- 
bers, 104. 


180 


JEWS— JOB 


JEWS,  and  faith  of  Gentiles,  Ro- 
mans, 264-267. 

at  Athens,  Acts  II.,  308. 

At  Ephesus,  Acts  II.,  427. 

Claims  of  the,  Romans,  78-83. 

hospitality   to    early    church, 

Acts  II.,  212. 

not  subject  to  disease,  Leviti- 
cus, 294. 

Paul  and  the  conscience  of  the, 

Romans,  36  66. 

Paul's    impeachment    of    the, 

Thessalonians,  83-98. 

ResponsibiUty  and  guilt  of  the, 

Romans,  67-77. 

Unbelief  of  the,  Romans,  244- 

249. 

JEZEBEL  and  Ahab,  L  Kings, 
347-356. 

and  Naboth,  I.  Kings,  478. 

Death  of,  II.  Kings,  124. 

Elijah    flees    from,    I.    Kings, 

404-414. 

Jehu  and,  II.  Kings,  120. 

Jehu    and    the    name    of,    II. 

Kings,  118. 

Persecutions  of,  I.  Kings,  356. 

JOAB,  adheres  to  David,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 224. 

and  the  return  of  Absalom,  II. 

Samuel,  210,  212. 

assassinates  Abner,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 52. 

■ at  the  head  of  David's  army, 

II.  Samuel,  127. 

Character  of,   II.  Samuel,  28; 

I.  Kings,  96-99. 

defeats  Sheba,  II.  Samuel,  322. 

• defeats  the  Syrians,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 154. 

kills  Absalom,  II.  Samuel,  272. 


JOAB,    kills  Amasa,    II.    Samuel, 

320. 

slain,  I.  Kings,  111-113. 

superseded  by  Amasa,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 292. 
JOASH,  King  of  Israel,  II.  Kings, 

178-186. 
JOASH,  Kingofjudah,  Chronicles, 

403-412. 
comes  to  the  throne,  II.  Kings, 

149. 
End  of  the  reign  of,  II.  Kings, 

166. 
JOB,    Pastoral    Epistles,    76,   77, 

192. 

Elihu  and.  Job,  341-377. 

Endurance  of,  James,  294-301. 

a  historical  personage?  Job,  22. 

Home  of,  Job,  20. 

made  priest,  Job,  410. 

Religion  of,  Job,  24-28. 

replies    to   Eliphaz,  Job,    116- 

134,  201-214,  281-297. 
replies    to    Bildad,    Job,    141- 

153,  222  242,  302-312. 
replies    to    Zophar,  Job,    162- 

184,  253-265. 

speaks.  Job,  85-98,  320-337. 

The  time  of,  Job,  31. 

The  trial  of,  II.  Samuel,  4. 

Trials  of.  Job,  50-66. 

Wife  of,  Job,  75-77. 

JOB,  The  Book,  The  author  and 

his  work.  Job,  3-18. 

Autobiographical,  Job,  7,  411. 

Charactersof  the  book,  James, 

297. 
Coincidences  with,  James,  267^ 

281,  291. 

Inspiration  of,  Job,  122. 

Logic  of,  Job,  295. 


JOB— JOB 

XXXV  IT.                                   LSI 

JOB,    Main  controversy    v>{.  Job, 

JOB  XII.,  II,  Jeremiah  L,   196. 

lOI. 

21,  24,  Psalms  III.,  167,  168. 

not      pure      history,      Jamt-s, 

22,  Daniel,   151. 

399. 

JOB  XIIL,  15,  Peter,   195. 

a  poem  of  the  soul,  Job,  3. 

JOB  XIV.,  1,  Galatians,  250;  John 

Poetical  art  of,  Job,  5. 

Epistles,  153. 

place  in  the  canon,  Job,  2-j. 

3,  Twelve  Pro[)hets  IL,  480 

Precursors  of,  Job,  3. 

10,  Jeremiah  I.,  230. 

prepares  for  Christ,  Job,  265, 

15,  Twelve  Prophets  II. ,  59. 

404. 

JOB  XV.,   15,  Daniel,   191. 

a  protest.  Chronicles,   t^Gt^. 

JOB  XVIL,  3,  n.  Kmgs,  135. 

Providence  and,  Deuteronomy, 

5.  Jeremiah  I.,  423. 

204. 

JOB  XIX  ,  13,  Twelve  Prophets  I., 

JOB  I.,  6,  Daniel,  179. 

321. 

6-12,  Song  of  Solomon,  220. 

JOB  XX.,  15,  II.  Kings,  224. 

7,  Peter,  224. 

29,  Twelve  Prophets  IL,  56. 

9-1 1,  Leviticus,  270. 

JOB  XXL,  14,  I.  Samuel,  79. 

21,  II.  Kings,  317. 

2i2>^  Jeremiah  I.,  94. 

JOB  II.,    1-7,   Song    of  Solomon, 

JOB,  XXIV.,    5,   Jeremiah    I.,   97; 

220. 

Twelve  Prophets  1 1.,  368. 

4,  5,  Leviticus,  270. 

II,   Twelve  Prophets  IL,  247. 

13,  Jeremiah  L,  293. 

13,  Isaiah  IL,  420. 

JOB  III.,  19.  Psalms  II.,  481. 

22,  Psalms  I.,  270. 

JOB  IV.,  16,  Psalms  II.,  418. 

JOB  XXVL,  12,  IL  Kings,  301. 

JOB  v.,  13,  James,  295. 

JOB  XXVIL,  12,  Jeremiah  L,  80. 

23,  Psalms  II.,  316. 

15,      16,      Ecclesiastes,      140; 

JOB  VII.,  I,  2,  James,  281. 

Twelve  Prophets  IL,  56. 

6,  Daniel,  258;  James,  291. 

JOB  XXVIIL,  3,  Psalms  L,  229. 

10,  Psalms  III.,   107. 

12,  James,  192. 

17,   18,  Psalms  I.,  -J},' 

23,  28,  I.  Kings,  132. 

JOB  VIII. ,  9,  Chronicles,  317. 

JOB  XXIX.,   12,  Psalms,  316. 

JOB  IX.,  9,  Twelve  Prophets,  167. 

14,   Twelve  Prophets  IL.  294. 

12,  Daniel,  202. 

JOB  XXX.,  9,  Psalms  IL,  299. 

26,  Revelation,  -ji,   144. 

JOB  XXXL,  30,  Jeremiah  I.,  265. 

2-j,  Jeremiah  I.,   1S4. 

2>7,  Jeremiah  L,  423. 

JOB  X.,  3,  Psalms  III.,  294. 

JOB  XXXIII. ,  20-22,  Psalms  III  , 

8,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  341. 

165. 

II,  Psalms  III.,  3S7. 

JOB  XXXV.,  15,  Twelve  Prophets 

20,  Jeremiah  I.,  184. 

L,  322. 

21.  Jeremiah  I.,  '^2. 

JOB  XXXVIL,  2,  Twelve  Prophets 

JOB  XL,  20,  Psalms  III.,  407. 

IL,  150. 

182 


JOB    XXXVIII.— JOHN-,    TEACHING 


JOB  XXXVIII.,  I,  II.  Kings,  22. 

4,  Jeremiah  I.,  239. 

7,  Daniel,  202. 

16,  17,  Daniel,  238. 

22,  23,  Exodus,  153. 

JOB    XXXIX.,    25,     Jeremiah    I., 

175- 
JOB  XL.,  4,  Romans,  89. 
JOB  XLI.,  5,  6,  Romans,  268. 

10-13,  Psalms  I.,  172. 

JOB  XLIL,  1-6,  Romans,  107. 

5>  6,  James,  248. 

10,  Psalms  I.,  131. 

12,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  402. 

JOEL,  Dr.,  on  Daniel,  Daniel,   ^,7, 

38,  100. 
JOEL,  The  Book,  Twelve  Prophets 

n.,  373-436. 

^Text  of,  Twelve  Prophets  II., 

397. 

JOEL  II.,  i-ii.  Exodus,  159. 

2,  Daniel,  320. 

2,  10,  30,  31,  Jeremiah  I.,  227. 

3,  Revelation,  146. 

4-10,  Revelation,  146. 

7,  Proverbs,  389. 

9,  Jeremiah  I.,  203. 

II,  32,  Peter,  327. 

13,  Ezekiel,  363. 

23,  James,  293. 

28,  Ezra,  75;  Peter,  2>3,' 

30,  31,  Revelation,  105. 

JOEL  III.,  4,  Jeremiah  II.,  249. 

7,  Ezekiel,  152. 

12,  13,  Revelation,  255. 

15,  Jeremiah  I.,  227;  Revela- 
tion, 105. 

18,  Jeremiah  I.,  85. 

JOHANAN,  Son  of  Kareah,  II. 
Kmgs,  469,  470. 

Jeremiah  IL,  187-196. 


JOHANNES   SCOTUS,    Acts    II., 

318. 
JOHN   THE    BAPTIST,  and  the 

book    of    Isaiah,     Isaiah    II., 

282. 
and  Herod,  Mark,  172;  Luke, 

103. 
baptizes   Christ,  Matthew,  31- 

T,S;  Mark,  6-13. 

Death  of,  Matthew,  1 86-191. 

Disciples  of,  Acts  II.,  342-344. 

the  herald  of  Christ,  Matthew, 

24-30;  Luke,  80-104. 

imprisoned,  Matthew,  49. 

in  doubt,  Matthew,   143-148. 

Seeming    failure    of,   Matthew, 

52- 

Success  of,  analyzed,  Luke,  92. 

Testimony   of,  John  I.,  33-52. 

JOHN,  The  evangelist,  Mark,  84. 

and  Paul,  Galatians,   126. 

JOHN,  TEACHING,  Birth  and  vic- 
tory, John  Epistles,  223-235. 

Boldness  in  the  day  of  judg- 
ment, John  Epistles,  210-219. 

extent  of  the  Atonement,  John 

Epistles,  102-105. 

The  Gospel  as  a  Gospel  of  wit- 
ness, John  Epistles,  236-240. 

Influence  of  Christ,  John  Epis- 
tles, 118  132. 

Knowing  all  things,  John  Epis- 
tles, 166-178. 

Lofty  ideals  perilous  unless  ap- 
plied, John  Epistles,   188-203. 

Missions   and  the   Atonement, 

John  Epistles,  106-116. 

Quietness  of  true  religion,  John 

Epistles,  300-309. 

sin  unto  death,  John  Epistles, 

254-259. 


JOHN,    TEACHING— JOHN  in. 


183 


JOHN,  Ti:.\rHING,  Thcolo-y  and 
life  in  the  second  Kpislle,  John 
Kpistles,  282-296. 

The  truism  with  no  exception, 

John  Epistles,  260-273. 

\'anity  of  the  world,  John  Epis- 
tles, 149-163. 

witness  of  men  and  the  resur- 
rection,   John     Epistles,     241- 

2  53- 
The  world  which  we  must  not 

love,  John  Epistles,  136-148. 
JOHN,   The  Gospel,  Analysis  and 

theory  of,  John  Epistles,  80-87. 

Coincidences  with,  James,  313. 

Conclusion  of,  John  II.,  418- 

427. 
Historical      not      Idealogical, 

John  Epistles,  88-99. 

Purpose  of,  John  I.,  ix-xiii. 

JOHN  I.,  I,  Mark,  354;  Hebrews, 

16. 

3,  John  Epistles,  138. 

3,  18,  Proverbs,  119. 

4,  John  Epistles,  189;  Revela- 
tion, 201. 

4,  9,  15,   16,  Galatians,  157. 

5,  Revelation,  199,  349. 

7,  Revelation,  12. 

9,  Matthew,  7 1 ;  Revelation,  12. 

10,  Ephesians,  125. 

12,  13,  Twelve  Prophets,  292. 

13,    James,    147;    Revelation, 

200. 
14,  Exodus,  375;  James,  115; 

Peter,  239;  John  Epistles,  T)^^ 

89;  Revelation,  128,  164,  224. 
16.  Ephesians,  93;  Revelation, 

164. 

17,  Hebrews,  235. 

18,  John  Epistles,  2^2. 


JOHN    I.,    19-27,   Matthew,     308; 
John  F^pistles,  28. 

2T^,  Isaiah  II.,  6. 

r26,  John  Epistles,  227. 

29,  Leviticus,  34. 

31,  Revelation,  234. 

2,6,  Revelation,  79. 

44,  Luke,  157. 

45,  Revelation,  78. 

51,  Revelation,  385. 

JOHN  II.,   i-ii.  Revelation,  322. 

2,  John  Epistles,  17. 

4,  Revelation,  135. 

6,  9,  John  Epistles,  227. 

9,  John  Epistles,  22>. 

1 1,  Peter,  239. 

12,  James,  28,  32. 

17,  James,  198. 

19-21,    Leviticus,    187;   Mark, 

220;  Pastoral  Epistles,  358. 

21,  Galatians,  252;  John  Epis- 
tles, ^2. 

22,  Revelation,  164. 

JOHN  III.,  2,  John  Epistles,  30. 

5,  Pastoral  Epistles,  286;  John 

Epistles,    2?,^    184,    226,   227, 
239- 

8,  Chronicles,  69. 

13,  Mark,  11 ;  Acts  II.,  419. 

16,    Acts    I.,   257;   Ephesians, 

III;  James,   228;  John  Epis- 
tles, 137. 

18,  19,  II.  Corinthians,  151. 

19,  Revelation,  381. 

20,  Leviticus,  1 14. 

21,  John  Epistles,  55. 

^2ii  Joshua,  297. 

-^;— 24,  25,  John  Epistles,  92. 

26,  Mark,  17. 

2-j,  Pastoral  Epistles,  274. 

2^,  29,  Revelation,   t^22. 


184                               JOHN  III.- 

-JOHN  VI. 

JOHN  III.,  9,  Song  of  Solomon, 

JOHN  v.,  25,  Ezekiel,  351;  Reve- 

45;   Matthew,     123;    Revela- 

lation, 341;  Ephesians,  335. 

tion,  113. 

26,   Hebrews,  14. 

2,^,,  Ephesians,  53. 

2y,  Revelation,  15,  136. 

34,  Leviticus,  203. 

27,    29,    Mark,    51;    Romans, 

36,  John  Epistles,  206. 

65. 

JOHN    IV.,    6-16,    John  Epistles, 

28,  Revelation,  341. 

22^. 

30,  Revelation,  254. 

lo,  Jeremiah  I.,  86. 

3i»  39.  John  Epistles,  30. 

12,  II.  Kings,  258. 

"—38,  John  Epistles,  206. 

13,  14,  Revelation,  128. 

39,    Proverbs,    304;  Pastoral 

14,  Revelation,  388. 

Epistles,  392. 

20,  II.  Kings,  259. 

39-46,  Romans,  14. 

21,  27^,  Ezra,  54;  Jeremiah  II,, 

40,  Romans,  281. 

2,72;  Galatians,  435,  438. 

43,  John  Epistles,  168. 

. 22,  Romans,  249. 

46,  47,   Leviticus,   9,  43;  Ro- 

 24,  Romans,  301,  305;  Revela- 

mans, 270;  Hebrews,  236. 

tion,  355. 

JOHN  VI.,  4i  Matthew,  192. 

26,  Pastoral  Epistles,  358. 

15,  Matthew,  296. 

2y,  II.  Kings,  45- 

21,  Revelation,  203. 

2,2,  Revelation,  234. 

27,  Ephesians,  53;  Revelation, 

34,  John  Epistles,  127. 

115. 

39,  John  Epistles,  206. 

28,    29,    30,    John     Epistles, 

46,  Luke,  200;  John  Epistles, 

62. 

28. 

31,  Luke,  151;  John  Epistles, 

52,  Matthew,  294. 

137. 

JOHN    v.,    I,    Ezra,    403;    John 

2,2,  Exodus,  244. 

Epistles,  29. 

?>2>,  55.  57.  Leviticus,  96;  Mark, 

3,  John  Epistles,  227. 

380. 

4,  Acts  I.,  405,  406. 

35.  John  Epistles,  206. 

• II,  John  Epistles,  137. 

36,  40,  John  Epistles,  82. 

17,  Exodus,  311. 

38,  Leviticus,  184. 

18,  Galatians,  250. 

39,    40,    44.    Galatians,    311; 

19,    Revelation,    2,     10, 

Revelation,  346. 

253- 

45,  Hebrews,  139. 

20,  Mark,  354;  John  Epistles, 

51,  52,  Leviticus,  96;  Hebrews, 

62. 

322;  John  Epistles,  139. 

21,     29,    John    Epistles,    213, 

54,  Mark,  220,  226. 

214. 

62,  Peter,  21. 

24,11.  Corinthians,  178;  Ephe- 

 67,  70,  Mark,  89. 

sians,  106. 

. 69,  Mark,  2t2. 

JOHN  VI.— JOHN  XL 


185 


JOHN  VI.,  70,  Matthew,  134;  John 

Epistles,  183. 
JOHN  VH.,   I,  Peter,   182;  John 

Epistles,  125. 

3.  4,  James,  34. 

4,  Revelation,  173. 

5,    Jeremiah    I.,    269;  James, 

29»  34. 

7,  James,  230. 

10,  James,  2^;^^  34. 

17,  Thcssalonians,  43;  Peter, 

247. 

27,  28,  James,  374. 

T^2,  Leviticus,  10. 

T^-],  Numbers,  358;  John  Epis- 
tles, 29,  ^2,  227. 

37?  38,  Revelation,  128. 

47,  James,  96;  John  Epistles, 

293- 

48,  Peter,  96. 

50,  51,  Matthew,  408,  431. 

70,  John  Epistles,  183. 

JOHN  VHL,  I,  Proverbs,  133. 

12,   Matthew,  67;  Revelation, 

126,  181. 

12-35,  John  Epistles,  125. 

14,  James,  334. 

18,  John  Epistles,  30. 

23,  James,  229. 

28,  Thessalonians,  45. 

31-44'  Galatians,  233. 

2^2»^  Jeremiah  I.,  1 24 ;  Galatians, 

181,  295. 

35.  Galatians,  297. 

^9,,  Peter.  71, 

41-44,  Ephesians,  104. 

44,  Jeremiah  I.,  363;  Pastoral 

Epistles,  78;  Peter,  289;  John 
Epistles,  189;  Ephesians,  400; 
John  Epistles,  183;  Revela- 
tion, 201. 


JOHN  VHI.,  56,  Romans,  107; 
Pastoral  Epistles,  2i^T  \  He- 
brews, 229;   Revelation,  102. 

- — 58,  Proverbs,  119. 

59,  Peter,  182. 

JOHN  IX.,  5,  Matthew,  67. 

7,  John  Epistles,  29,  227. 

24,  Jeremiah  I.,  287. 

25,  Peter,   102, 

34,  Revelation,  174. 

35,    Romans,    17;   Revelation, 

175,  305- 

41, Galatians,  258;  James,  271. 

JOHN  X.,  I,  Jeremiah  I.,  203. 

1-18,  Leviticus,  55;  Revela- 
tion, 167. 

4,  Peter,  208. 

7,  Revelation,  305. 

10,  Romans,   179;  Revelation, 

94. 

II,  James,   130. 

16,  Ephesians,  135;  Revela- 
tion, 298. 

17,  i8.  Pastoral  Epistles,  356. 

18,    Leviticus,    213;   Hebrews, 

20,  John  Epistles,   183. 

22,  Daniel,  246;  Acts  I.,    173. 

28,    Philippians,    25;    James, 

465- 

34-38,  Psalms  II.,  427. 

^y,  John  Epistles,  206. 

1^,  James,  334. 

JOHN  XL,  I,  Luke,  308. 

5,  Luke,  308. 

13,  John  Epistles,  2>2. 

1 6,  John  Epistles,  94,  309. 

25,  James,  334;  John  Epis- 
tles, 206;  Revelation,  342. 

T^l,  Pastoral  Epistles,  136. 

34,  Mark,  394. 


186 


JOH!<f  XL— JOHN  XV. 


JOHN  XI.,  52,  Ephesians,  135. 

JOHN    XIV.,    I,     John      Epistles, 

JOHN  Xn.,  1,  Matthew,  2>77- 

139- 

2,  Luke,  308. 

3,   Hebrews,   296;   Revelation, 

6,  Luke,  379. 

253. 

16,  Galatians,  12. 

6,  9,  Hebrews,  14;  Revelation, 

24,  Leviticus,  459. 

193. 

2034,  John  Epistles,  6. 

12,  Acts  I.,  128. 

26,  Galatians,  256. 

14,  John,  30. 

2-j,  Mark,  395;  Pastoral  Epis- 

 16,  Galatians,  253;  John  Epis- 

tles, 136;  Revelation,  135. 

tles,  115. 

28,  John  Epistles,  30. 

17,  Galatians,  254. 

31,   Matthew,  420;  Galatians, 

18,  Revelation,  390. 

434;   James,  229;  Revelation, 

19-21,  John  Epistles,  244,  252; 

208;    Ephesians,    400;    Peter, 

Revelation,  342. 

224. 

20,  Revelation,  370. 

32,  Matthew,  432;  Peter,  102. 

22^,   Romans,   371;  Ephesians, 

34,  Daniel,  248, 

89;     Philippians,     205;    John 

35>  John  Epistles,  131. 

Epistles,  177. 

36  2>^y  Revelation,  239. 

26,  Peter,  260;  John  Epistles, 

37-40,  Exodus,  170. 

172. 

38,  Isaiah  I.,  6. 

2y,    Leviticus,    235;    Song    of 

41,  Romans,  15. 

Solomon,  261 ;  Galatians,  t^'&t^ ; 

48,  Peter,  59. 

Revelation,  6,  131. 

49,    50,   Leviticus,   56;  Philip- 

30,      Ephesians,      102,     400; 

pians,  121. 

James,   230;  Peter,  299;  Rev- 

JOHN   XIII.,    1-6,  John  Epistles, 

elation,  225. 

126,  227. 

JOHN  XV.,  2,  Revelation,  39. 

1,  14,  John  Epistles,  29,  80. 

3,  Peter,  367. 

2,  John  Epistles,  183;  Revela- 

 5,   6,   Galatians,   308;  Revela- 

tion, 119. 

tion,  214. 

4,  Peter,  215. 

• 8  II,  Galatians,  381. 

7,  Peter,  258. 

12  17,  John  Epistles,  iSS. 

8,  Peter,  49. 

1.4,  Proverbs,  236;  John  Epis- 

 21,  Pastoral  Epistles,  137. 

tles,  309. 

• 23,  Pastoral  Epistles,  58. 

15,    Galatians,     249;    James, 

25,  26,  Matthew,  390. 

161. 

2y,  John  Epistles,  183. 

16,    Romans,    325;     Pastoral 

29,  Matthew,  391. 

Epistles,  60,  219. 

30,  Matthew,  391;  John  Epis- 

 18,  19,  James,  230;  John  Epis- 

tles, 4,  34,  97. 

tles,  138. 

35,  Galatians,  354. 

19,  Revelation,  214. 

JOHN  XV.—fOirN'  XX, 


187 


JOHN  XV.,  20,  Pastoral  Epistles, 
423;  Revelation,  11,  46. 

22,  James,  272. 

25,  Psalms  II.,  298. 

26,  John  Epistles,  30,   1 1  5. 

26,    27,  Ephesians,   153;  John 

Epistles,  28;  Revelation,  i^y. 

2-j,  John  Epistles,  29. 

JOHN  XVI.,  2,  James,  181;   Rrv- 
elation,  1 1. 

7,  dalatians,  253;  John  Epis- 
tles, 1 15. 

8,  Peter,  143. 

1  r,  Galatians,  434;  Ephesians, 

400;  Revelation,  208, 

13,  Romans,  310;  Revelation, 

165. 

14,  15,  Peter,  11,  12. 

16,  Luke,  141. 

21,  James,  330. 

30,  II.  Corinthians,  175. 

12,    I.    Kings,    419;   Pastoral 

Epistles,  423. 

33»John  Epistles,  2iy,  Revela- 
tion, 177,  225. 

JOHN  XVII.,  3,  Romans,  45;  Rev- 
elation, 2i77' 

4,  Peter,  174;  Revelation,  182, 

318. 

5,  Hebrews,  2i7\  Peter,  71. 

6,  10,  Romans,  409. 

10,  Galatians,  11. 

II,  Revelation,  12. 

12,  Revelation,  123. 

13,  Revelation,  131, 

14,  Ephesians,  428. 

15,   16,  Revelation,  225. 

18,  Thessalonians,  45, 

19,   Leviticus,   57;    Ejjhesians, 

369;  Peter,  151. 

20-23,  Galatians,  239. 


JOHN  XVII.,  21,  Ephesians,  150; 

John  Epistles,  188. 
22,    Ephesians,    208;     Revela- 
tion, 348,  370. 
24,  Leviticus,  235;  Galatians, 

256;  John  Epistles,   137. 
JOHN  XVIIL,  13,  Luke,  I'&i. 

15,  Matthew,  407. 

23,  Leviticus,  484. 

2)^,  Revelation,  328. 

29-38,  Matthew,  416. 

30,  Peter,  190. 

31,  Acts  IL,  32, 

2i2t,  Revelation,  2>l' 

2>'^',  Matthew,  421, 

JOHN  XIX.,  5,  John  Epistles,  34, 

97- 
ir.     Pastoral    Epistles,     274; 

James,  255;  Peter,  ^'^. 
12,   Twelve  Prophets   I.,  115; 

Revelation,  231. 

2T^,  24,  Matthew,  423. 

24,  28,  Pastoral  Epistles,  392. 

25,  James,  26,  27. 

26,  Pastoral  Epistles,  58. 

2-jy  John  Epistles,  26,  29. 

2iO,  Revelation,  80,  182. 

31,  Matthew,  387. 

34i    John    Epistles,    29,    199, 

22y. 
35-37.   John   Epistles,  30,  89; 

Revelation,  2>77- 
Z^,   Exodus,   267;  Revelation, 

79- 
JOHN  XX.,  5,  11,  Peter,  38. 

9,  Luke,  405. 

10,  II,  John  Epistles,  251. 

1 1,  James,  107. 

16,  John  Epistles,  251. 

17,  James,  29;  Peter,  18. 

20,  John  Epistles,  26. 


188 


JOHN  XX.— I.  JOHN  II L 


JOHN  XX.,  21  23,  Matthew,  439; 

L    JOHN    L,    8,     Romans,   191; 

Revelation,  210. 

Pastoral  Epistles,  48;  James, 

22,  Galatians,  70. 

96. 

23,  James,  343. 

9,  Ezra,  141;  Song  of  Solomon, 

27,  James,  102;  John,  82. 

241;  James,  339. 

28,  Romans,   15,  262. 

L  JOHN  H.,  Phihppians,  41. 

29,  Romans,  345. 

1,  James,  168. 

30,  3i>  John  Epistles,  242. 

8,  Revelation,  ■]?,. 

JOHN  XXL,  I,  8,  John   Epistles, 

14,  Peter,  58. 

29. 

15,   16,  Acts  L,  257;  James, 

7,  Pastoral  Epistles,  58;  John 

229;  Revelation,  225, 

Epistles,  7. 

17,    Jeremiah    I.,    239;    Gala- 

 12,  John  Epistles,  247. 

tians,  30;  James,  230. 

15-17,  Matthew,  437,  439. 

18,    Leviticus,    127;   Pastoral 

17,  Peter,  24. 

Epistles, 374, 376,  2>7^',  James, 

18,  Peter,  260. 

279,  446;  Peter,  164;  Revela- 

 22,  Revelation,  243. 

tion,  215,  236. 

24,  John  Epistles,  302. 

1 9,  Mark,  258;  Revelation,  215. 

25,  James,  185. 

20,    Leviticus,    203,    216;    H. 

JOHN,  The    Epistles,  John   Epis- 

Corinthians,    50;    Ephesians, 

tle,  v-ix. 

256. 

JOHN,  First  Epistle,  and  the  Gos- 

 22,   23,  Pastoral  Epistles,  48, 

pel  of  John,  John  Epistles,  21- 

302. 

38. 

24,  James,  121. 

General   rules    for    its    interp- 

 26,  James,  96. ' 

retation,    John    Epistles,    75- 

29,  Proverbs,  159,  162. 

1^- 

L  JOHN  HL,  2,  Galatians,  230. 

Image  of  St.   John's  soul    in, 

3,  Thessalonians,  31. 

John  Epistles,  54-74- 

4,    Leviticus,  444;   Galatians, 

Polemical     element    in,    John 

150;  Pastoral  Epistles,  48. 

Epistles,  39-53- 

7,    10,   Proverbs,  159;  James, 

Surroundings,    John    Epistles, 

96. 

3-20. 

8,    Matthew,    165;   Ephesians. 

Texts  and  Ver',ions,  John  Epis- 

104,   400;    Pastoral   Epistles, 

tles,    79-100,    101,    ii-j,    i33> 

1^' 

134,  164,  179,  185,  204,  207, 

9,  Revelation,  348. 

220,  274. 

10,  Ephesians,  400. 

I.  JOHN  I.,  I,  John,  I,  29;  Peter, 

12,  Hebrews,  223;  Peter,  157; 

262^. 

Revelation,  201. 

6,  Galatians,  354. 

15,  James,  222. 

7,  Leviticus,  34,  135. 

16,  Galatians,  380,  397. 

/.  JOHN  TIT.— JONATHAN- 


189 


I.  JOHN  III.,  19,  Ephesians,  248; 
Hebrews,  226. 

24,  Ephesians,  53. 

I.  JOHN  IV.,  I,  Ezra,  268;  Ephe- 
sians, 54;  Revelation,  229. 

1,  2,  3,  Deuteronomy,  351. 

2,  3,  Pastoral  Epistles,  48. 

3,  Pastoral  Epistles,  376. 

7,    Romans,    342;    Galatians, 

161. 

9,  10,  Galatians,  380. 

10,  Leviticus,  227. 

14,  16,  Galatians,  432;  James, 

229. 

15,  Ephesians,  250. 

16,  Romans,  137. 

20,    James,    132,   231;  Peter, 

249. 

I.  JOHN  v.,  I,  5,  Pastoral  Epis- 

tles, 48. 

4,  18,  Revelation,  208,  209. 

6,  Leviticus,  354. 

16,  Mark,  96. 

18,    James,    244;    Revelation, 

348. 
20,  21,  Revelation,  243. 

II.  JOHN,  7,  Pastoral  Epistles, 
48. 

8,     Matthew,    284;    Romans, 

109. 

III.  JOHN,  2,  James,  224, 

7,   Romans,  347;  James,  130. 

9,      Pastoral     Epistles,     Ti2i7\ 

James,  2>7^. 

JOHN'S  EVE,  St.,  Acts  IL,  335. 

JOHNSON,  Dr.  Samuel,  Colos- 
sians,  342. 

JONADAB  and  Amnon,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 195. 

Jehu  and,  Deuteronomy,  322. 

Laws  of,  Jeremiah  II.,  46. 


JONAH,   Numbers,   226;  Acts  II., 

119. 
and    the    great    fish,    Twelve 

Prophets  II.,  523. 
and  the  repentance  of  Nineveh, 

Twelve     Prophets      II.,     529- 

535- 
-^—refuses  to  go  to  Nineveh,  Exo- 
dus,  75;  Twelve  Prophets  II,, 

514-522- 

JONAH,  The  Book,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  491-541. 

Character  of,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  498-500. 

Date  of,  Twelve  Prophets  II., 

496-498. 

Our     Lord's    use    of,    Twelve 

Prophets  II.,  507-509. 

Purpose   of.  Twelve  Prophets 

IL,  500-507. 

Unity  of.  Twelve  Prophets  IL, 

509-513. 
JONAH  L,  5,  John  Epistles,  107. 

6,  Ephesians,  335. 

JONAH    III.,    3,  II.  Corinthians, 

294. 

6,  Jeremiah  I.,  293. 

JONATHAN,  Son  of  Abiathar,  I. 

Kings,  90. 
JONATHAN,  Acts  IL,  30. 
and    David,    I.    Samuel,    292, 

317-328. 
condemned  to  death  by  Saul, 

I  Samuel,  238. 
David's  lament,  II.  Samuel,  i- 

13- 

eats  honey,  I.  Samuel,  234. 

exploit  at  Michmash,  I.  Samuel, 

217-228. 
Son  of  Saul  attacks  Geba,  I. 

Samuel,  207. 


190 


JON  A  THAN— JOSHUA 


JONATHAN,     son     of     Gershom, 

Judges,  335-339- 
true  to  David,  I.  Samuel,  306, 

360. 
JOPPA,  Acts  II.,  118. 
JORDAN,    Crossing   the,   Joshua, 

49. 

divided,  Joshua,  106-116. 

reached,  Joshua,  95-105. 

JORTIN,  John,  Acts  I.,  232. 

JOSEPH,  Genesis,  325-414. 

Administration     of,     Genesis, 

369-382. 
and    his    brethren    in    Egypt, 

Genesis,  383-414. 

and  Jacob,  Genesis,  328. 

and  Pharaoh's  dream,  Genesis, 

361. 

Burial  of,  Joshua,  399. 

compared  with  Christ,  Genesis, 

336. 
compared  with  David  and  Dan- 
iel, Genesis,  326. 

Faith  of,  Hebrews,  260. 

forgotten.  Exodus,  14. 

friendless  and  helpless.  Genesis, 

341- 

gives  his  sons  to  Jacob,  Gene- 
sis, 421,  422. 

in  Egypt,  Exodus,  3. 

in  prison.  Genesis,  339-354- 

■ interprets      dreams.      Genesis, 

350. 

marries  Asenath,  Genesis,  371. 

Place  of  burial,  Joshua,  203. 

Preservation    of  the  body  of, 

Genesis,  412;  Exodus,  204. 

Purity  of.  Genesis,  346. 

typical  in  his  life,  Genesis,  340. 

JOSEPHUS,  Flavins,  Acts  I.,  125, 
158,  174,  198)  217,  235,  236, 


238,  251,  274,  354;  II.,  II, 
31,  2>^^  2>?i,  53,  95,  102,  185, 
428;  Thessalonians,  326;  He- 
brews, 26;  James,  36,  39,  53, 
221,  285,  349;  Peter,  124. 

JOSHUA,  Activity  of,  Joshua,  198. 

and  Achan,  Joshua,  165-188. 

and    the   battle   of  Bethoron, 

Joshua,  223-235. 

and     the     battle     of    Merom, 

Joshua,  236-248. 

and  the  complaint  of  Ephraim, 

Joshua,  306. 

and    the   Gibeonites,    Joshua, 

211-222. 

and    Jesus,    Joshua,   21,   248, 

325- 

Antecedents  of,  Joshua,  22-36. 

The  call  of,  Joshua,  48-59. 

Captures  Ai,  Joshua,  189-200. 

Change  of  the  name  of,  Joshua, 

32. 
Charge  to  the  people,  Joshua, 

70-81. 

Death  of,  Judges,  45. 

defeated  at  Ai,  Joshua,  168. 

Designation  of.  Numbers,  339. 

Encouragement     of,     Joshua, 

60-69. 
His    work    continued    that    of 

Moses,  Joshua,  13. 
in  practical  command.    Num- 
bers, 244. 
jealous    for    Moses,    Numbers, 

132;  Joshua,  31. 
Last  appeal  of,  Joshua,  t^^^^- 

401. 

not  a  prophet,  Joshua,  12. 

Old  age  of,  Joshua,  249-255. 

one  of  the  spies,  Numbers,  151. 

Self-sacrifice  of,  Joshua,  2^22^. 


JOSHUA— JUBA  L 


101 


JOSHUA,  a  spy,  Joshua,  2,2. 
a  successor  to  Moses,  Joshua, 

37-47- 
work   for  Israel,  Joshua,  402- 

416. 
JOSHUA,     The    Book,    criticism, 

Joshua,  17. 

ill  two  parts,  Joshua,  14. 

Revision  of  the,  Joshua,  19. 

Spiritual    lesson     of,    Joshua, 

21. 
JOSHUA  I.,  5,  Hebrews,  318. 
JOSHUA  VII.,  19,  James,  97. 
JOSHUA  VIII.,  30,  Deuteronomy, 

435- 

32-35,  Galatians,  188. 

JOSHUA  IX.,  27,  Ezekiel,  428. 
JOSHUA  X.,    10,    II,   Psalms  II., 

438. 
JOSHUA  XI.,  20,  Chronicles,  288. 

22,  Jeremiah  II.,  232. 

JOSHUA  XIII.,   7,   Deuteronomy, 

357- 

15-28,  Jeremiah  II.,  237. 

2>ii  Kphesians,  50. 

JOSHUA    XVIII.,   22,  Chronicles, 

327. 

28,  Chronicles,  278. 

JOSHUA  XX.,  4,  Numbers,  402. 

JOSHUA  XXL,  17,  Jeremiah  II., 
120. 

JOSHUA  XXII.,  5,  Deuteronomy, 
123. 

19,  Ezekiel,  323. 

JOSHUA  XXIII.,  II,  Deuter- 
onomy, 123. 

12,  Chronicles,  TT- 

JOSHUA  XXIV.,  19,  Romans,  88. 

JOSIAH,  King  of  Judah,  Isaiah 
II.,  30;  Jeremiah  I.,  19-21; 
Twelve  Proi)hct5  II.,  1 2-17. 


JOSIAH   becomes  king,  Dcuteron 

omy,  45. 

Death  of,  II.  Kings,  402-410. 

Reformation  of,  II.  Kings,  385. 

- — Reign   of,   II.  Kings,  374384; 

Chronicles,  456-460. 
JOTHAM,     King    of    Judah,    II. 

Kings,  214-216. 
JOTHAM,        Judges,        213-223; 

Isaiah  I.,  20. 
JOURNAL      OF     HELLENIC 

STUDIES,  Acts  II.,  261,  265, 

364,  372,  374. 
JOURNAL     THEORY,    Numbers, 

1 1. 
JOY,  after  the  return   from  exile, 

Ezra,  56,  57. 
The   believers    double,    Peter, 

163-176. 
for  the  justified,  Romans,  128- 

137- 

The  fruit  of  the  spirit  is,  Gala- 
tians, i'^\-2i^Z- 

in  the  resurrection,   John   II., 

231-232. 

in    suffering,  Colossians,    116- 

131- 

in  temptation,  James,  62-67. 

of  the    Beatitudes,    Matthew, 

62. 

of  the  Lord,  Ezra,  290-294, 

of  the  Soul,  Proverbs,  193. 

Peace    and,    Philippians,   317. 

336. 

A  religion  of,  Leviticus,  473. 

True,   I.  Samuel,  180;  Psalms 

I.,  48. 
JOYCE,    James    W.,    Acts   oj  the 
^  Church,  Acts  II.,  237. 

Irish  names.  Acts  II.,  9i9>. 

JUBAL,  Genesis,  46. 


192 


JUBILEE  OF  THE  HEBREWS— JUDGES 


JUBILEE  OF  THE  HEBREWS, 
Leviticus,  487-501. 

JUDAIZING,  Philippians,  173- 
187. 

JUDAH,  son  of  Jacob,  and  his 
speech  to  Joseph,  Genesis,  392. 

blessed  by  Jacob,  Genesis,  431. 

JUDAH  THE  TRIBE,  blessed  by 
Moses,  Deuteronomy,  464. 

Genealogies       of,      Chronicles, 

106. 

in  the  van.  Numbers,  102. 

The    inheritance    of,    Joshua, 

287-299. 

JUDAH,  The  Kingdom,  Chro- 
nology of,  745-458  B.  C,  II. 
Kings,  286. 

compared  with  Israel,  I.  Kings, 

276-285. 

contrasted  with  Israel,  Jere- 
miah I.,  1 14-133. 

Decline  and  fall  of,  Ezekiel,   3- 

12. 

End  of  the  Monarchy,  Ezekiel, 

97-111. 

Exodus    from   Babylon,   Ezra, 

36-47- 
Kings    of,    Table,    II.    Kings, 

496. 
Last  Kings  of.  Chronicles,  455- 

464. 
Persistent  apostacy,  Jeremiah 

II.,  283-294. 
Ruin    of,    Jeremiah    II.,    295- 

307- 

Social  and  religious  corrup- 
tion, Jeremiah  II.,  270-282, 

Wicked    kings    of,    Chronicles, 

198-200. 

See  NAMES  OF  KINGS. 

JUDAS,  Acts  L,  80,  81;  XL,  56. 


JUDAS     compared      with     Ahaz, 

Isaiah  I.,  118. 
compared  with  Haman,  Ezra, 

371- 
compared    with    Lot,   Genesis, 

190. 
Remorse     of,    Matthew,    413- 

415- 
the  traitor,  Matthew,  134,  381, 

385,  404;  Mark,  88-91,  364- 

374;  Luke,  379-381;  John  IL, 

89-105,  263. 
JUDAS  not  Iscariot,  James,  372. 
JUDAS  OF  JAMES,  James,  372, 

JUDE,  The  Epistle,  and  II.  Peter, 

James,  391-400. 
Authenticity    of,    James,   365- 

376. 
Persons  denounced  in,  James, 

388-391. 

Purpose  of,  James,  ^77^  2>7^' 

JUDE,  4,  James,  168;  Revelation, 

99. 
6,  Ephesians,  401;  Revelation, 

206. 

7,  Revelation,  250. 

8,    10,   Pastoral  Epistles,  48, 

302;  John  Epistles,  120. 

9,  Peter,  300;  Revelation,  205. 

14,  Hebrews,  301;  Peter,  156. 

16,  Peter,  315. 

18,  Philippians,  281. 

20,  Romans,  222. 

JUDGES,    The,     Period     of    the, 

Joshua,  412. 

Their  vindication.  Judges,  57. 

JUDGES,    The   book,    consistent, 

Judges,  56. 
full  of  war  like  ardour,  Judges, 

3. 


JUD  GES— JULIAN 

THE  A  POST  A  TE                  193 

JUDGES,      a       second       Genesis, 

JUDGES  XX.,  12,  Joshua,  318. 

Judges,   I. 

16,  Joshua,  318. 

Ji;nGi:S  I.,  i,  Dontcronnni),  464. 

26,  Leviticus,   105;  Ezra,   \2'^. 

8,  Chronicles,  278. 

JUDGES  XXL,   19,  Joshua,  313. 

17,  riutmicles,  82. 

JUDGMENT,     and     then     deliver- 

Jl'DGKS II.,  9,  Joshua,  324. 

ance,  Judges,  74. 

JUDGKS  IV.,  4,  Daniel,  30. 

Boldness  in  the  day   of,   John 

II,   17,  Joshua,   263. 

Epistles,  210-219, 

JUDGES    v.,    4,    Numbers,    2>^y, 

The  broken  vessel  a  symbol  of. 

Twelve  Prophets  II.,  151,  153. 

Jeremiah  I.,  398-410. 

13,  23,  Daniel,  67. 

by  Christ,   John   I.,    200;   He- 

 16,  Psalms  II.,  278. 

brews,  188-195. 

2^,   Ecclesiastes,    107;  Revela- 

 Carefulness      after,     Leviticus, 

tion,  389. 

250-255- 

31,  Deuteronom}',  123. 

Conviction  of,  John  IL,  221. 

JUDGES  VII.,  2,  Jeremiah  I.,  129; 

Day  of,  James,  412. 

18,  Hebrews,  262. 

Doctrine  of  eternal,   Hebrews, 

JUDGES    VIII.,    21,    Psalms    II., 

^7- 

437- 

Fear  of  the,  Deuteronomy,  234. 

JUDGES  IX.,  8,  Chronicles,  2^27- 

Future,       Ecclesiastes,      320; 

17,  Psalms  III.,  421. 

Twelve      Prophets    IL,      369- 

2^,  Jeremiah  I.,  72. 

371- 

JUDGES    X.,    10-14,   Jeremiah   I., 

The    impending,     Mark,     351- 

99. 

358. 

JUDGES  XL,  2>2^^  Hebrews,  263. 

of  the  beast  and  false  prophet, 

35,  Hebrews,  262. 

Revelation,  2i^7-2>M- 

JUDGES  XII.,  5,  Psalms  III.,  348. 

of  God,  I.   Samuel,   242;   Job, 

JUDGES  XIII.,  7,  Hebrews,  262. 

292;    Psalms  I.,   62-66;   Jere- 

 22,  John  I.,  4. 

miah  I.,  355. 

JUDGES  XVI.,  28,  Hebrews,  262. 

of  the  heathen.  Twelve  Prof)h- 

JUDGES  XVII.,  Numbers,  ^2. 

ets  IL,  431-436. 

3,  Jeremiah  I.,  67. 

of  Israel,   Twelve  Prophets  I., 

4,  Jeremiah  I.,  196. 

303-307- 

7,  Numbers,  398. 

ofmurmurers.  Numbers,  120. 

JUDGES  XVIII.,  7,  Joshua,  346. 

of  Satan,  Revelation,  335359- 

30,  Joshua,  345. 

The    righteous    have    it    here, 

JUDGES  XIX.,  I,  Joshua,  346. 

Peter,  189-200. 

22,  Jeremiah  II.,  283. 

to  come,  Peter,  335-344- 

30,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  248. 

JULIAN  THE  APOSTATE,  Acts  I., 

JUDGES    XX.,    8,    Deuteronomy, 

393;  Pastoral  Epistles,  6,  96, 

464. 

119. 

194 


JULIAN  THE  APOSTATE— JUVENAL 


JULIAN  THE   APOSTATE   com- 

JUSTICE, Right  course  of.  Num- 

pared with  Joash,  Chronicles, 

bers,  316. 

411. 

should  be  open.  Judges,  412. 

JULIUS,  The  Centurion,  Acts  II., 

Wisdom  and.  Proverbs,  41,  42. 

460. 

JUSTIFICATION,    and    hoHness, 

JUSTICE,  and  blood  revenge.  Num- 

Romans,  156-186. 

bers,  401. 

by     faith,     Joshua,     1 59-161; 

Equality  of,  II.  Samuel,  124. 

Proverbs,  161;  Romans,  93-99. 

God's,  Hebrews,  99. 

life  by  the  Holy  Spirit,  Romans, 

Human  effort  for,  Judges,  104; 

203-217. 

Job,  237. 

Peace,  love  andjoy  in,  Romans, 

Impatient,  Numbers,  315. 

128-137- 

in    Israel,   Deuteronomy,   ^yy- 

JUSTIN  MARTYR,  Acts  I.,  ix,  x, 

395- 

xi,  275,   355,  400,  414,  417; 

in  punishment,  11.  Samuel,  207. 

II.,   27,   267,   282,  395,    396; 

Longing    for,    Isaiah    I.,  436, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  6,  96,  119; 

437. 

James,  4,  130,  146,429,441; 

of  God,  I.  Samuel,  29;  Psalms 

Peter  v,  87,  191,  231. 

II.,  190. 

JUSTUS,  Acts  II.,  325. 

Passion  for,  Judges,  58. 

JUVENAL,  Acts  II.,  132. 

KADESH— KINGDOM  OF  CHRIST 


195 


KADESH,  Mustering  at,  Numbers, 

222. 

Position  of,  Numbers,  384. 

The  tribes  at,  Numbers,  103. 

KALISCH,  M.  M.,  Galatians,  293; 
John  Epistles,  268. 

KANT,  Immanuel,  John  Epistles, 
124. 

KAUTSCH,  Emil,  Jeremiah  II., 
225,  231,  240,  315,  319,  2,22, 
328,  339,  349;  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  380,  381,  454. 

KEATS,  John,  Song  of  Solomon, 
190. 

KEBLE,  John,  Acts  I.,  20,  21, 
227,  324,  368;  II.,  70;  James, 
106,  107. 

KEDAR  and  Hazor,  Jeremiah  II., 

251-254- 
KEILAH,    David    at,    I.    Samuel, 

357- 

KEIM,  T.,  on  the  resurrection  of 
Christ,  I.  Corinthians,  331. 

KEMPIS,  Thomas  a.  Song  ofSolo- 
mon,  335;  I.  Corinthians,  300. 

KENITES,  The,  Numbers,  105, 
266,  312. 

KIRROTH-HATTAVAH,  Num- 
bers, 134;  Psalms  II.,  391, 

KINDNESS,  Brotherly,  Hebrews, 
99. 

a  fruit  of  the  spirit,  Galatians, 

384- 
Laws    of,    Deuteronomy,  411- 

432. 
of  David,  II.  Samuel,  135. 


KINDNESS,  of  the  renewed  soul, 

Colossians,  308. 
to  be  returned  with  kindness, 

II.  Samuel,  150. 

True,  II.  Samuel,  22,  143. 

KING,  The,  and  people  of  Ezekiel's 

vision,  Ezekiel,  447-461. 
KING,  called  shepherds,  Jeremiah 

II.,  100,  102,  324. 
Dependent      upon      Jehovah, 

Deuteronomy,  298-301. 

Favour  of  a,  Job,  357,  369. 

Israel  demands  a,  I.   Samuel, 

109-120. 
Samuel   defines   a,  I.  Samuel, 

116. 
a    speaker    for    God,    Deuter- 
onomy, 296-307. 

Theory  of  a,  Chronicles,  195. 

Treatment    of  the.    Proverbs, 

324-336. 
Worship  of  God    and    the,    I. 

Samuel,  197. 
KING,    Rev.    Robert,    The  Ruling 

Elder,  Acts  II.,  417. 
KINGDOM    OF    CHRIST,    Luke, 

241-254;  John  II.,  50-55. 
The   Gospel  of  the,   Matthew, 

57-104. 
Invitation  to  enter  the,  Mat- 
thew, 95-104. 

The  law  of  the,  Matthew,  69-95. 

—^Parable  of  the,  Matthew,  173- 

185. 

Place   in    the,    Matthew,   287- 

292;  Mark,  287-295. 


196 


KINGDOM  OF  CHRIST— I.  KINGS  XX. 


KINGDOM  OF  CHRIST,  Signs  of 

the,   Matthew,  105-13 1. 
KINGS,   The  book    of,    I.    Kings, 

14-29. 
Chronology  of  the  first  book, 

I.  Kings,  500-503. 
Historian   of  the  book    of,    I. 

Kings,  30-38. 
I.  KINGS  I.,  3,  Song  of  Solomon, 

4- 

I.  KINGS  II.,  7,  Luke,  y6. 

I.  KINGS  HI.,  3,  Deuteronomy, 
123,  382. 

4,  Joshua,  218. 

5,  Joshua,  318. 

II,  Jeremiah  I.,  265. 

25,  Psalms  HI.,  368. 

26,  Peter,  121. 

I.  KINGS  IV.,  20,  25,  Ecclesiastes, 
10. 

21,  Revelation,  150. 

24,  Psalms  II.,  411. 

25,  Deuteronomy,  364. 

2,2i,  Proverbs,  12. 

I.  KINGS  v.,  10,  II,  Acts  II.,  183. 

I.  KINGS  VI.,  2,  Ezra,  91. 

22,  Exodus,  41S. 

36,  Ezra,  93. 

I.  KINGS  VIII.,  II,  Revelation, 
264. 

22,  Pastoral  Epistles,  97. 

27,  Acts  I.,  303. 

47,  Psalms  HI.,  142, 

44,  Daniel,  226. 

50,  Psalms  III.,  151. 

41,  53,  Ephesians,  50. 

63,  Ezra,  loi. 

I.  KINGS  IX.,  3,  Jeremiah  I.,  67. 

I.  KINGS  X.,  9,  Peter,  135. 

I.  KINGS  XI.,  3,  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, II, 


I.  KINGS  XL,  4,  Ecclesiastes,  18. 

26,  Psalms  HI.,  348. 

29,  Joshua,  314;  Jeremiah  I., 

282;  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  25, 
I.  KINGS  XII.,  4-16,  Ezekiel,  441. 

16,  Ezekiel,  316. 

21,  Joshua,  317. 

22,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  25. 

I.    KINGS    XIIL,    3,     Isaiah     L, 

113- 

6,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  280. 

I.  KINGS  XIV.,  17,  Song  of  Solo- 
mon,  12. 

25,  Jeremiah  L,  90. 

27,  28,  Ezekiel,  428. 

I.  KINGS  XV.,  4,  Psalms,  354, 

13,  Daniel,  211. 

17,  Jeremiah  II.,  335. 

I.  KINGS  XVI.,  7,  Proverbs,  332. 

18,  23,  24,  Song  of  Solomon, 

12. 

34,  Joshua,  151. 

I.  KINGS  XVIL,  I,  Revelation, 
182. 

6,  Revelation,  204. 

22,  Hebrews,  263. 

I.  KINGS  XVHL,  21,  Jeremiah  L, 

97- 

2"^,  Jeremiah  I.,  T^oy. 

28,  Jeremiah  L,  99. 

29,  ■Ty^ii  Ezekiel,  472, 

I.  KINGS  XIX.,  1-3,  Hebrews,  263. 

5,  Revelation,  204. 

■ 10,  Deuteronomy,  20;  Jere- 
miah I.,  102;  Romans,  285; 
James,  294. 

12,  Romans,  90. 

18,  Romans,  285;  Jeremiah  I.,. 

96. 

I.  KINGS  XX.,  43,  Jeremiah  I., 
148. 


/.  A'INGS  XXL— II.  A'INGS  XXIII. 


]97 


I.   KINGS  XXI.,   3,   Jeremiah   II.. 
310. 

I.  KINDS  XXII.,  5-2S,Ezekiel.  117. 

II,  Jeremiah  I.,  282;  II.   124. 

19.    Daniel,    202;    Revelation, 

271. 
39,  Psalms,  64. 

II.  Kings  I.,    10,    12,   Revelation, 
i8i. 

II.  KINGS  II.,  2,  Joshua,  202. 

9,  John  I.,  48. 

10,  Acts  I.,  125. 

II.  KINGS  III.,  4,  Leviticus,  161. 

15,  Daniel,  30. 

2-j,  Jeremiah  I.,  156. 

II.  KINGS  IV.,  13,  Ezekiel,  348. 

23,  Numbers,  350. 

35,  Hebrews,  263. 

II.  KINGS  v.,  3,  Leviticus,  330. 

• 7,  Leviticus,  331. 

12,  13,  Jeremiah  I.,  298. 

16,  Daniel,  212. 

11.   KINGS  VI.,    16,   Jeremiah    I., 

424. 

17,  Hebrews,  263. 

II.  KINGS  IX.,  7,  James,  294. 

1 1,  Daniel,  31. 

25,  2y,  Joshua,  303. 

30,  Ecclesiastes,  107. 

I7i  Jeremiah  I.,  203. 

II.   KINGS  X.,    15,  Deuteronomy, 

322. 
II.  KINGS  XL,  12,  Psalms  I.,  2>t, 

III.,  70. 
II.  KINGS  XII.,  II,  Ezekiel,   437. 

• 17,  Ezekiel,  474. 

II.  KINGS  XIIL,  21,  Ezekiel,  348. 
11.  KINGS  XIV.,  6,  Ezekiel,  146. 

22,   Twelve  Prophets  II.,  167. 

II.  KINGS  XV.,  19,  Ezekiel,  192. 
35,  Jeremiah  XL,  17. 


11. 


II. 


.  KINGS  XVL,  3,  Jeremiah   IL, 

2S5. 
—9,  Jeremiah  II. ,  248. 
-r^i5,    16,  Ezekiel,  455,  472. 
.  KINGS  XVII. ,  5,  Isaiah  I.,  148. 
—6,  Twelve  Prophets  II. ,  19. 

—  10,  Jeremiah  I.,  97. 

—  15,    Psalms    III.,    218;    Jere- 
miah I.,  79, 

—20,  Jeremiah  I.,  161. 

-24  41,  Ezekiel,  323. 

—25,  Jeremiah  I.,  89. 

—31,  Leviticus,  387;  Ezra,  66. 

—32,  Jeremiah  I.,  259. 

-2,2,,  Ezra,  66. 

—41,  Ezodus,  293. 

KINGS  XVIIL,    2,    Isaiah   I., 

375- 
-4,    Jeremiah    II. ,    18;    Twelve 

Prophets  IL,  5  ;Galatians,  267. 
-7,  Jeremiah  I.,  106. 
-13-16,  Isaiah  I.,  321. 
-16,  Isaiah  I.,  345. 
-22,  Jeremiah  I.,  97. 
-26,  Jeremiah  I.,  218. 
-3 1 J  2i'2-,  Colossians,  63. 

KINGS  XX.,  I,  Isaiah  L,  375. 
-5,  Hebrews,  263. 
-12,  13,  Romans,  218. 

KINGS  XXL,  4,   5,    Jeremiah 

I.,  155. 
-6,  Jeremiah  IL,  285. 
-7,  Ezekiel,  84. 
-2T,,  Twelve  Prophets  IL,  12. 

KINGS  XXIL,  8,  Jeremiah  L, 

15,  251;  IL,  2,Z- 
-11-20, Twelve  Prophets  IL,  25. 
-13,  Jeremiah  L,  198. 
-14,  Jeremiah  L,  i6. 
KINGS  XXIIL,  2,  Jeremiah  L, 

15. 


198 


//.  KINGS  XXIII.— KORAH 


IL  KINGS  XXIII.,  3,  Jeremiah  I., 

KIRKPATRICK,  A.  F.,  Psalms  I., 

i6,  252. 

222;  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  117, 

9,  Ezekiel,  430. 

ii8. 

10,  Jeremiah  I.,  97. 

KIRJATH-JEARIM,  The  Ark  at. 

14,  Ezekiel,  437. 

I.    Samuel,    85;    Psalms    III., 

15,  Jeremiah  II.,  147. 

349- 

19,  Jeremiah  I.,  24. 

KISS,  Greet  one  another  with  a 

24,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  27. 

holy,  Thessalonians,  259-261. 

26,  Ezekiel,  23,  146. 

KITTO,  John,  Acts  I.,   25,    181, 

29,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  21. 

278,  282;  II.,  16. 

30-32,  Jeremiah  II.,  7. 

■ The  blindness  of,  Joshua,  126. 

34,   Jeremiah  I.,   28,  43;    H., 

KLOSTERMANN,     August,    Eze- 

63. 

kiel,  49,  55;  Twelve  Prophets 

2i6,  Jeremiah  I.,  43. 

II.,  127. 

33-35,    Twelve    Prophets    II., 

KNOWLEDGE,  Increasing  in  the, 

28. 

of  God,  Colossians,  49. 

2>7,  Jeremiah  I.,  152;  II.,  5. 

not  the  main  thing.  Job,  390. 

II.  KINGS  XXIV.,  I,  Jeremiah  I., 

of  all    things,    John   Epistles, 

152,     204;     II.,    44;    Twelve 

166-178. 

Prophets  II.,  30. 

of    Christ,    Philippians,     199- 

2,  Jeremiah  I.,  271. 

216;  Peter,  250. 

6,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  2,0. 

of  God,  Hebrews,  144. 

8-17,  Jeremiah  II.,  85. 

to  pass  away,  I.  Corinthians, 

10,  Jeremiah  I.,  208,  294. 

303-305. 

13,  Jeremiah  I.,  124. 

KNOX,   Alexander,  Acts  II.,  100; 

14-16,  Ezekiel,  3. 

Philippians,  199,  200,  202. 

18-20,  Jeremiah  II.,  96. 

KNOX,  John,  Isaiah  II.,  95. 

II.    KINGS   XXV.,  4,   5,  Song  of 

KOHATHITES,    Duties   of,   Num- 

Solomon, 298. 

bers,  42;  Joshua,  342. 

9,  Song  of  Solomon,  266. 

KOHELETH,    Job,    38;    Ecclesi- 

18,  Ezekiel,  437 ;  Twelve  Proph- 

astes, 14,  23-26,  285. 

ets  II.,  47. 

KOHLER,  August,  divides  Jonah, 

19,  Jeremiah  I.,  72. 

Twelve  Prophets  II.,  510. 

27-30,  Jeremiah II.,  86;  Twelve 

KOLLING,  W.,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

Prophets  II.,  31. 

8. 

KINGSLEY,  Charles,  Acts  I.,  209. 

KORACHITES,  Psalms  II.,  43. 

KISH,  Asses  of,  I.  Samuel,  127. 

KORAH,  his  claim.  Numbers,  196. 

KIRIATH-HUZOTH,        Numbers, 

his  doom.  Numbers,  205. 

290. 

Revolt     of.     Numbers,      195; 

KIRIATH-SEPHER,   Judges,   18, 

Psalms  III.,  144. 

20, 

used  by  Jude,  James,  450-462. 

KOS  TERS—K'  YKIA 


199 


KOSTERS,  Dr.  W.  H.,  Twelve 
Prophets  II.,  204,  205,  206, 
207,  234,  248,  260,  274. 

KRENKEL,  M.,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 9,  207,  407. 

KRUGER,  Gustav,  Isaiah  II.,  435, 
442. 

KUENEN,  Abraham,  Isaiah  II., 
458;  Jeremiah  I.,  36S;  II., 
205,  206 J  Ezekiel,  14;  Daniel, 


35,  162;  Twelve  Prophets  I., 
19,  203,  238;  II.,  81,  86,  117, 
126,  192,  203,  213,  280,451, 
457,  458,  498. 

KUENEN,  on  the  Commandments, 
Deuteronomy,  61. 

KUHN,W.,  Journal  Comp.  Philol., 
Acts  II.,  265. 

KURTZ,  John  II.,  Hebrews,  253. 

KYRIA,  John  Epistles,  283. 


200 


LAB  A  N—LA  MEN  TA  TIONS  I V. 


LABAN,  Genesis,  293-295. 
LABOUR,     Christian     worth     of, 
Thessalonians,    203-205,   375- 

390- 

Necessity  of,  Genesis,  30. 

Results  of.  Proverbs,  269. 

LACHISH,  Nebuchadnezzer  at,  II. 
Kings,  458. 

Sennacherib  at,  II.  Kings,  2)'^?,. 

LACORDAIRE,  Pere,  quoted,  Ec- 
clesiastes,  130,  131. 

LACROIX,  Paul,  Manners  of  Med- 
dle Ages,  Acts  II.,  16. 

LACTANTIUS,  Jeremiah  II.,  6y. 

LAING,  Samuel,  quoted.  Prov- 
erbs,  379,  380. 

"LAMB  OF  GOD,"  Jesus  the, 
John  I.,  46. 

LAMB  OF  THE  PASSOVER,  The, 
Exodus,  178,  179,  18 1,  184, 
185. 

LAMBETH  CONFERENCES, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  26(i. 

LAMECH,  The  family  of,  Genesis, 

45- 

Song  of.  Genesis,  50. 

LAMENTATIONS  OF  JERE- 
MIAH, The  date,  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 85. 

Origin    of.    Song  of  Solomon, 

75-86. 

Theme    of.   Song  of  Solomon, 

87-96. 

with  the.  Song  of  Solomon,  6y 

346. 


LAMENTATION!.,  5,  Jeremiah  I., 

295- 

II,  Jeremiah  I.,  85. 

12,  Peter,  136. 

14,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  56. 

LAMENTATIONS  II.,  10,  Jere- 
miah I.,  293,  305. 

15-17,  Jeremiah  I.,  316. 

18,  Psalms  II.,  374. 

LAMENTATIONS  III.,  6,  Psalms 
III.,  412. 

14,  Psalms  II.,  299. 

19,  Isaiah  II.,  419. 

Peter,  196. 
Jeremiah  I.,  305. 
Twelve  Prophets  II.,  74. 

38,  Chronicles,  28S;  Jeremiah 

I.,  104. 

49,  Psalms  II.,  374. 

53,  Daniel,  220,  228. 

55-57,  Daniel,  6. 

LAMENTATIONS  IV.,  2,  Jere- 
miah I.,  291;  Twelve  Prophets 
II.,   175. 

5,  II.  Kings,  453. 

7,   8,   II.   Kings,   452;   Daniel, 

139,  218. 

8,  Psalms  HI.,  91. 

10,  II.  Kings,  78,  452. 

12,  Ezekiel,  227. 

17,  Ezekiel,  105. 

20,  Jeremiah  I.,  317;  Eze- 
kiel, 99;  Twelve  Prophets  IL, 
31- 

21,  Job,  19. 


-25, 
-28, 


LAMENT  A  TIONS  IV,— LA  W 


201 


LAMENTATIONS    IV.,      22,     II. 

Kings,  461. 
LAMENTATIONS  V.,  4,  II.  Kings, 

452. 

• 7,  Isaiah  II.,  183. 

8,  Psalms  III.,  369. 

16,  Jeremiah  I.,  294. 

19,  Psalms  III.,  93. 

LAMMENAIS,  M.  do,  Ecclesiastcs, 

182. 
LAMP,   The,  shining  in   the  dark 

place,  Peter,  271-282. 
LAND,    and  rents,   Deuteronomy, 

Boundaries  of,  Numbers,  390. 

Division  of,  Numbers,  330. 

Ezekiel's  allotment  of  the,  Ezc- 

kiel,  485-499- 

hunger,  Deuteronomy,  15S. 

The     Jubilee    and,     Leviticus, 

491-493- 
law.   Numbers,  407;  Isaiah  I., 

42. 
Possession    of,    Deuteronomy, 

362;  Joshua,  2?,T^. 
The  vowing  of,  Leviticus,  546- 

548- 

LANDELS,  William,  Tr7ie  Glory  of 
Woman,  I.  Corinthians,  253. 

LANFRANC,  Archbishop  of  Can- 
terbury, Anecdote  of,  Prov- 
erbs, 205. 

LANGE,  John  P.,  James,  285, 
296,  399. 

LANGLAND,  William,  Piers  Ploio- 
maji  quoted.  Twelve  Prophets 
I.,  145,  162,  393,  399. 

LANGUAGE,  Abuse  of,  Isaiah  I., 
260. 

LAOCOON,  Song  of  Solomon, 
71- 


LAODICEA,  Colossians,  402. 

Church  of,  Revelation,  61,  62. 

Council  of,  James,   7,    14,    17, 

24;  Peter,  xiii. 
LAPIDE,  CORNELIUS  a,  Acts  L, 

242;    II.,    46;    Thessalonians, 

177;  John  Epistles,  162. 
LAPSED,  The,  Hebrews,  15. 
LARDNER,       Nathaniel,      James, 

420. 
LAST   DAYS,    Pastoral    Epistles, 

2,77;  James,  278. 
LATERAN      COUNCIL,     James, 

341- 
LATIMER,   Bp.   H.,  Jeremiah  II., 

113- 
LAUGHTER    of  God,   Psalms    I., 

15- 
LAVER,  of  regeneration,  Pastoral 

Epistles,  285-292. 

of  the  Tabernacle,  Exodus,  422. 

LAW,  William,   Song  of  Solomon, 

342- 

LAW,  The,  against  idolatry,  Deu- 
teronomy, 277-294. 

and     religion,     Deuteronomy, 

239-252. 

Christian,    rejected.    Numbers, 

187. 

Contemplation   of,   Psalms   I., 

192. 

contrasted     with      Salvation, 

Hebrews,  31. 

The  cross  the  death  of,  Colos- 
sians, 213-225. 

Curse  of  the,   Galatians,  i88- 

195. 

Delight  in  the,  Psalms  L,  3. 

Design  of  the,  Galatians, '211- 

226. 

given  at  Sinai,  Exodus,  277. 


202 


LAW—LEMME,  Z. 


LAW,  given  by  the  Son,  Hebrews, 

LAWRENCE,  Lord,  viceroy  of  In- 

31. 

dia,  Deuteronomy,  306. 

given     through     angels,    He- 

LA WS  OFMANU,\^Q\x\.txowomY, 

brews,  23. 

30-32,  242,  243,  245,  246. 

how  far  immutable,  Hebrews, 

LAWYER,  Work  of  the,  I.   Corin- 

63- 

thians,  135. 

in  the  spiritual  life,   Romans, 

LAYING  ON  OF  HANDS,  Leviti- 

187-202. 

cus,  41-46;  Acts  I.,  284,  285; 

in    the    commandments.    Exo- 

II., 414;  I.  Corinthians,  103; 

dus,  280-286. 

Pastoral  Epistles,  6^^,  64,  67, 

^The  lesser,  Exodus,  330-366. 

166,  167,    315;    Hebrews,  87. 

. moulded     into     the     present 

LAYMEN,  Numbers,  202. 

form,  Ezra,  8. 

in  Synods,  Acts  II.,  236. 

Nehemiah  and  the,  Ezra,  271- 

LAZARUS,  Feast  of,  John  II.,  4- 

283. 

17- 

of  the  daily  life,  Leviticus,  277- 

raised,  John  I.,  351-367;  Ephe- 

518. 

sians,  86. 

of    Hebrews    judged    harshly, 

LEADER,     God     does      not     ap- 

Exodus, 334. 

prove  all  the  acts  of  a,  Judges, 

of    Holiness,    Leviticus,    267- 

59- 

446. 

Qualification    of  a.    Numbers, 

of      kindness,     Deuteronomy, 

340;  Judges,  75,  216. 

411-432. 

LEAH,  Genesis,  291. 

of  the  kingdom,  Matthew,  69- 

LEAVEN,  banished  from  houses. 

95- 

Numbers,  352. 

of     sacrifices,     Deuteronomy, 

of  the  Pharisees,   Mark,   208- 

253-266. 

212. 

of  the  stranger.  Exodus,  353- 

Prohibition  of,  Leviticus,  y^i' 

357. 

LE     BAS    AND    WADDINGTON, 

of  uncleanness,  Leviticus,  277- 

Voyage  Archeology  Acts  I.,  270; 

366. 

IL,  216. 

of  worship,  Exodus,  2i2i^-Z2i^. 

LE  BLANT,  M.,  Acts  I.,  297. 

our  schoolmaster.  Exodus,  8. 

LEGALISM,   Hebrews,  148,  202. 

Paul  on  going    to,    L    Corin- 

LEGIONS IN  PALESTINE,  Acts 

thians,  129-144. 

II.,  103. 

Solidarity  of  the  divine,  James, 

LEGISLATION  in  Numbers,  Num- 

132-134. 

bers,  12. 

Supreme     excellence     of     the. 

LEIBNITZ,  Gottfried  W.,  Romans, 

Psalms  HL,  244-289. 

359. 

LAW  OF  ACCOMMODATION,  in 

LEMME,  L.,  Pastoral  Epistles,  9, 

God's  revelation,  Genesis,  6. 

407. 

LEMUEL— LEVITICUS  XIV. 


203 


LEMUEI.,   King,   Word  of,   Prov- 
erbs, 396. 
1.1:0  THE  GREAT,  James,  340. 
LEPERS,  Song  of  Solomon,  277- 

Exclusion  of.  Numbers,  48. 

no  pariahs,  Numbers,  51. 

their  condition,  Numbers,  48. 

LEPROSY,  Cases  of.  Numbers,  50. 
Cleansing    of,    Leviticus,   345- 

357- 

healed,      Matthew,      107-109; 

Mark,  42-46. 

of  garment  or  house,  Leviti- 
cus, 358-366. 

of  Miriam,  Numbers,  147. 

the  type  of  sin,  Leviticus,  336; 

Numbers,  49;  Matthew,  108. 

Uncleanness  of,  Leviticus,   T^zy- 

344- 
LESLIE,  Charles,  Short  and  easy 
method  with    the  Deists,   Acts 

I.,  77- 
LEVI,  son  of  Alpheus,  Christ's  call 

to,  Mark,  56-61. 
LEVI,  son  of  Jacob,  and  Jacob's 

blessing.  Genesis,  429, 
and    the    Shecemites,    Genesis, 

314- 
LEVI,  the  tribe,  blessed  by  Moses, 

Deuteronomy,  465. 
in     Deuteronomy,      Numbers, 

separate.  Numbers,  7. 

Service  of,  Numbers,  25. 

LEVITES,  admitted  priests.  Num- 
bers, 2,^. 

- — and  Hezekiah,  Chronicles,  429. 

Cities    of  the,  Numbers,   396; 

Joshua,  340-352. 

Consearaliun  of,  Numbers,  40. 


LEVITES,  Duties  of  the,  Numbers, 

42;  Chronicles,  100. 

given  to  Aaron,  Numbers,  34. 

rettirning  from  Babylon,  Ezra, 

44. 

Service  of  the,  Numbers,  39. 

revolt  with   Korah,   Numbers, 

20I> 

— — Support  of  the.  Numbers,  215. 
LEVITICAL    LAW,   Leviticus,    i; 

Numbers,  8. 
LEVITICUS,  Occasion  and  plan  of, 

Leviticus,  18. 
Origin  and  authority  of,  Leviti- 
cus, 5. 
Present  day  use  of,  Leviticus, 

24. 

Purpose  of,  Leviticus,  20. 

LEVITICUS  IV.,  3,  Isaiah  L,  131; 

Ezekiel,  438. 

7,  Revelation,  98. 

31,  Exodus,  413. 

LEVITICUS  v.,  24,  Jeremiah  I., 

176. 
LEVITICUS  VI.,  13,  Ezra,  316. 
LEVITICUS  VII.,   15,  Psalms  I., 

222. 

16,  Proverbs,  97. 

3i-34>  Deuteronomy,  315. 

LEVITICUS  VIII.,  6,  30,  Hebrews, 

186. 

9,  John  Epistles,  13. 

26,  Numbers,  32. 

;i:i,  Numbers,  ^2. 

LEVITICUS  X.,  6,  Ezekiel,  437. 
LEVITICUS     XIII.,      17,    Mark, 

43- 

45,  Song  of  Solomon,  284. 

46,  il.  Kings,  Si- 

LEVITICUS   XIV.,   12,  Numbers, 

49. 


204 


LEVITICUS  XV.— LIBERTY 


LEVITICUS  XV.,  31,  Chronicles, 

LEVITICUS  XXIII.,  39,  I.  Kings, 

435" 

290. 

LEVITICUS XVI.,  2,  Exodus,  2>77- 

LEVITICUS   XXIV.,   14,  Acts  I., 

6,  Ezekiel,  438;  Hebrews,  74. 

2>?>2>- 

II,  15,  Ezekiel,  454. 

LEVITICUS     XXV.,      7,    Deuter- 

 12,  Exodus,  418. 

onomy,  430. 

27,  Hebrews,  322. 

23,  Psalms  II.,  II. 

LEVITICUS     XVIL,     3,    Deuter- 

 25,  Jeremiah  II.,  311. 

onomy,  259. 

42,  Exodus,  340. 

- — II,  Exodus,  398. 

LEVITICUS   XXVI.,    II,    12,    11. 

LEVITICUS  XVIII.,   3,   Jeremiah 

Corinthians,  246. 

L,  225. 

26,  Revelation,  92. 

5,    Romans,    268;    Galatians, 

Ti2f>  Psalms  III.,  147. 

191. 

34,  35,  Jeremiah  I.,  347. 

18,  Ezekiel,  191. 

36,  II.  Kings,  406. 

24,  Jeremiah  I.,  '&2. 

39,  Psalms  III.,  150. 

25,  Jeremiah  I.,  202. 

41,  Proverbs,  311. 

LEVITICUS  XIX.,  I,  2,  Numbers, 

LEVITICUS  XXVII.,  14,  Jeremiah 

2^- 

I.,  67. 

9,  Deuteronomy,  358. 

25,  Ezekiel,  452. 

12,  Exodus,  303. 

28,  29,  Deuteronomy,  170. 

13,  James,  280. 

LEWIN,    Thomas,    Acts    I.,    196, 

17,  Matthew,  74. 

248;   II.,   31,   2>^,   39,  45,  60, 

18,  Galatians,  342. 

80,  102,  119,    163,    167,    186, 

18,    34,    Deuteronomy,     127; 

198,  360. 

Luke,  295;  Romans,  359. 

LIBANIUS,  Acts  IL,  151,  152. 

19,  11.  Corinthians,  240. 

LIBERALITY,     Christian,    Num- 

 27,  Jeremiah  I.,  205. 

bers,  75;  Proverbs,  43,  145. 

2ili^    2>^^    Proverbs,    218;   Eze- 

 of  God,  Joshua,  294. 

kiel,  452. 

LIBERTY,  and  license,  P^ter,  307, 

LEVITICUS  XXI.,  5,  Jeremiah  I., 

313-322. 

334;  Ezekiel,  437. 

and  love,  I.  Corinthians,  177- 

• 9,  Revelation,  309. 

193- 

LEVITICUS  XXIII.,  6,  Numbers, 

Christian,  I.  Corinthians,  229. 

84. 

Claim    for    Christian,     Philip- 

10,    Deuteronomy,    358;   Eze- 

pians, 226-22i2i- 

kiel,  468. 

Cost  of.  Exodus,  Zy. 

17,  Numbers,  184;  Acts  I.,  ^^t^. 

defined,  Leviticus,  444. 

^24,  Ezra,  276. 

The  Gospel  of,  Luke,  142-147. 

34,    Z^,  Twelve  Prophets  II., 

Law  of,  Deuteronomy,  128. 

341. 

of  the  Jubilee,  Leviticus,  490. 

LIBER  T  Y—LIN  COLN 


205 


LIBERTY,    Perils    of,    Galatians, 

333-346. 
LICE,    Plague    of,    Exodus,    136, 

137. 
LICENTIOUSNESS,     of    oriental 

religions,  Leviticus,  t^'^^. 
of  the  Paganism  of  Paul's  day, 

Ephcsians,  271-274. 
LIDDON,  H.  P.,  Acts  I.,  55,  340; 

James,  Ii6,  230. 
LIFE,  as  vigour.  Job,  260. 

a  battle,  Isaiah  I.,  339. 

Brevity  of.   Psalms  II.,  4,   7; 

III.,  12. 
The  chief  good  in  the  wise  use 

of,  Ecclesiastes,  229-275. 

Close  of.  Numbers,  235. 

conflict,  Deuteronomy,  99. 

. Drama  of,  Numbers,  330. 

a  fire,  Isaiah  I.,   T^T^y. 

From  death  to,  Ephesians,  95- 

108. 
. The    ideal    in    Christ,   Judges, 

264. 

Illusoriness  of.  Psalms  II.,  5. 

Jesus  Christ  The,  John  I.,  21 ; 

XL,  128-131. 
Loss  of  a  high  ideal  of,  James, 

29. 
Love  to  God  the  law  of,  Deu- 
teronomy, 1 16-145. 
Meaning  of  individual.  Genesis, 

14;  Job,  61. 
The  new  nature  and  the  new, 

Colossians,  290-304. 

of  wisdom,  Proverbs,  39-51. 

Precepts  for  the  innermost,  Co- 
lossians, 305-319. 
The   present    Christian    life    a 

risen,  Colossians,  257-270. 
Principle  of  man's,  Job,  2i^2. 


LIFE,  Purpose  of.  Job,  52. 

rewards  life.  Job,  409. 

Sanctity    of  human,    Joshua, 

32;-329- 
spirit  and  character,  Jeremiah 

II.,  62. 
Words  of  eternal,  John  I.,  227- 

worth  living?   Ecclesiastes,  4; 

Romans,  178. 
LIGHT,  Children  of  the,  Ephesians, 

321-335- 

The  Gospel  of,  Luke,  137-142. 

healing,  James,  245. 

of  the  world,  Matthew,  66-69; 

John  I.,  271-283. 

LIGHTFOOT,  Dr.  J.,  Acts  I.,  64, 
84,  97»  125,  147,  158,  177, 
181,  182,  233,  260,  272,  T,2,2>^ 
335;  II.,  32,  57,  441;  James, 
77.  328. 

LIGHTFOOT,  Bishop  J.  B.,  Acts 
I.,  166,  195,  239,  268,  269, 
274,  335,  ?i7^\  n.,  96,  173, 
252,  291,  293,  300,  344,  350, 
:!i^2>.  378,  427;  Romans,  423; 

11.  Corinthians,  87,  374;  Ephe- 
sians, 68,  90,  202,  262;  Philip- 
pians,  173,  175,  317,  364; 
Colossians,  90,  155,  221,  325. 

on  Galatians,  Acts  II.,  19,  20, 

50,  79,  84,  247,  251,  264, 
266;  Romans,  115;  Galatians, 

12,  16,  96,  143,  169,  217, 
264,  274,  289,  328,  371,  385; 
Pastoral  Epistles,  113,  158, 
227,  361;  James,  17,  20,  32, 
12©,  367,  379,  429,  451 ;  John 
Epistles,  283. 

LINCOLN,  Abraham,  James, 
235. 


206 


LINUS— LOTZE 


LINUS,    Pastoral    Epistles,     113, 

LOMBARD,       Peter,      Sentaitiae, 

2,7,^,  415,  416. 

Romans,  y6. 

LITTLE      THINGS,      Absorbing 

LOIS,  Pastoral  Epistles,  21,  388. 

power  of,  Judges,  176. 

LONG-SUFFERING,       Galatians, 

Christianity  and,  Philippians, 

384;  Colossians,  310. 

360. 

LORD,    The   term    when    used    of 

Divine  concern  for,  Luke,  278. 

Christ,  Pastoral  Epistles,  424. 

Importance  of,  Leviticus,  410. 

LORD'S  PRAYER,  Luke,  180-185. 

test  the  quality  of  men,ljudges. 

and     the    Decalogue,    Deuter- 

174. 

onomy,  72). 

Value  of,  Colossians,  378,  379; 

■ and     Mohammedan     custom, 

John  Epistles,  127. 

Leviticus,  373. 

LIPSIUS,  R.  A.,  Acts  I.,  25;  II., 

LORD'S  SUPPER,  The,  Numbers, 

5,  53- 

86-89;  Hebrews,  :32  2. 

LITERATURE,    Christianity  and 

• Abuse  of,  at  Corinth,  I.  Corin- 

unchristian. Pastoral  Epistles, 

thians,  259-272. 

224-236. 

Desecration  of,  Leviticus,  440- 

LITURGICAL  FORMS  in  the  New 

442. 

Testament,   Pastoral  Epistles, 

instituted,  Matthew,  392-395; 

^2>.  134. 

Mark,  374-383- 

LIVINGSTONE,    David,    and    his 

LOT,    Abraham    rescues.   Genesis, 

religion    inseparable,    Joshua, 

121-133. 

4. 

compared    to    Judas,  Genesis, 

begs     to     be     sent     forward. 

190. 

Joshua,  272. 

Escape    of,    Peter,    241,    291, 

Faith  of,  I.  Samuel,  421. 

292. 

Story  of.  Proverbs,  59. 

Failure  of,  Philippians,  39. 

Suffering  of,  I.  Kings,  422, 

a  hospitable  man,  Genesis,  176. 

LOA  VESAND  FISHES,  For  the 

separates  from  Abraham,  Gen- 

sake of  the,  II.  Samuel,  94. 

esis,  108-120. 

LOCKE,  J.,  Acts  I.,  402. 

visited  by  angels.  Genesis,  176, 

LOCUSTS,    and   the   day    of  the 

188. 

Lord,     Twelve    Prophets    II., 

Wife  of.  Genesis,  194-197. 

398-417- 

LOT,  The,  cast  in  choosing  Saul, 

for  good,  Ecclesiastes,  267. 

I.  Samuel,  158. 

The   plague  of.   Exodus,    154- 

Inquiry  by,  Joshua,  171;  Prov- 

160; Revelation,  146,  147. 

erbs,  217. 

LOGOS,  The,  Doctrine  of,  John  I., 

• Saul  uses,  I.  Samuel,  237. 

3-70;  John  Epistles,  83. 

used  by  the  Phihstines,  I.  Sam- 

 doctrine  not  in  the  Pentateuch, 

uel,  78. 

Exodus,  ^6^. 

LOTZE,  Hermann,  Isaiah  I.,  410. 

LOVE— LUKE 


207 


LOVE,  and  the  absence  of  faith, 

Judges,  406. 
and  character,  Philippians,  31, 

38. 
and    hohness,     Romans,    J59, 

360. 
and  humiHty,  Galatians,  2>17^ 

378. 
and     prayers,    Thessalonians, 

II7-I34- 

Attribute  of,  Isaiah  II.,  140. 

the  bond  of  perfectness,  Colos- 

sians,  315-317- 

covering  sins,  Peter,  168. 

— — ^The  craving  for,  Thessaloni- 
ans, 122. 

emphasized,  Deuteronomy,4 1 2. 

for  the  justified,  Romans,  128- 

139- 

For    the   sake  of,   Colossians, 

448-451. 

the  fruit  of  the  spirit,  Gala- 
tians, 379-381. 

The  Gospel  of,  Luke,  134. 

Jealousy     of    Divine,    James, 

232-237. 

Labour  of,  Thessalonians,  27- 

30. 

Liberty    and,    I.    Corinthians, 

177-193;  Galatians,  340. 

Measure  of  Christ's,  II.  Corin- 
thians, 186-197. 

No    gift    like,    I.    Corinthians, 

293-308. 

of  Christ,  Ephesians,  200;  John 

II.,  408. 

of  David  for  Absalom,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 214. 

of  God,  Joshua,  104;  Psalms 

II.,  25;  Isaiah  II.,  76,  399, 
451;  Thessalonians,  2)T^'2il^- 


LOVE,  of  Ruth  and  Naomi,  Judges, 
380. 

our  true  life,  John  II.,  197. 

A  reserve  in,  Genesis,  402. 

Sin    against,   Isaiah   II.,  467; 

Twelve  Prophets  I.,  346-354. 

to  God  the  law  of  life,  Deuter- 
onomy, 1 16-145. 

True,  tested.  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 15-27. 

Union  in,  Colossians,  158-162. 

unquenchable.  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 28-40. 

LOVE-FEASTS,  See  AGAPE. 

LOVING  KINDNESS,  Psalms  I., 
348;  II.,  217,  458,  464;  III., 
83,  108,  380;  Isaiah  I.,  436. 

LOWLY,  Exaltation  of  the,  James, 
80-82. 

LOYALTY  of  Barzillai,  11.  Sam- 
uel, 303. 

of     the     people     to     Joshua. 

Joshua,  79. 

to  Christ,  Joshua,  81. 

to  God,  Joshua,  367. 

LUCIAN,  Acts  I.,  278;  II.,  312. 

LUCIFER  OF  CAGLIARI,  James, 

431- 

LUCRETIUS,  Galatians,  39; 
Ephesians,  268. 

idea  of  God,  Exodus,  60. 

LUDOLF,  Hiob,  History  of  Ethi- 
opia, Acts  L,  415. 

LUKE,  Pastoral  Epistles,  23,  27, 
207,  209,  421-423. 

and    Demas,   Colossians,   398- 

401. 

at  Philippi,  Acts  II.,  391, 

Life- of,  Luke,  yj. 

LUKE,  The  Gospel,  Authorship  of, 
Acts  I.,  10. 


208                                     LUKE— LUKE  X. 

LUKE,  Chronology  of,  Luke,  130. 

LUKE  IV.,  16,  Mark,  21. 

Coincidences  with,  James,  313. 

16-29,  Jeremiah  L,  7. 

Genesis    of  the  Gospel,   Luke, 

17,  Isaiah  II.,  6. 

1-14. 

21,  Pastoral  Epistles,  392. 

LUKE  L,  I,  2,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

24,  Jeremiah  I.,  264. 

Z2>7^  361. 

25,  Daniel,  237. 

4,  Pastoral  Epistles,  388. 

26,  27,  Galatians,  140. 

5,  Chronicles,  103. 

29,  James,  34. 

6,  James,  t^i. 

LUKE  v.,  8,  James,  248. 

10,  Exodus,  419;  Leviticus,  71. 

12,  Mark,  y^^. 

19,  Romans,  235. 

22,  James,  122. 

28,  Ephesians,  35. 

LUKE  VI.,  12,  Jeremiah  I.,  128. 

36,  58,  James,  2?). 

42,  43,  Galatians,  364, 

53,  James,  49. 

54>  55>  Galatians,  209. 

70,  Romans,  13. 

78, Ephesians,  no;  John  Epis- 
tles, 197. 

LUKE  II.,  7,  James,  31. 

9,  Revelation,  304. 

13,  Daniel,  202. 

22-24,  Leviticus,  314. 

25,  26,  38,  Daniel,  288;  James, 

32. 

32,  James,  115. 

36,  Chronicles,  105;  Ezra,  42; 

John  Epistles,  285. 

T^y,  John  Epistles,  19. 

44,  James,  29>. 

49,  Leviticus,  55. 

52,  Isaiah  II.,  169;  Mark,  353. 

LUKE  III.,  4,  Isaiah  II.,  6. 

14,  Acts  II.,  105. 

21,  I.  Kings,  143. 

22,    Leviticus,    203;    John   I., 

41. 

2T,  31,  II.  Kings,  435;  Jere- 
miah II ,  92. 

31,  I.  Kings,  105. 

LUKE  IV.,  5-7,  Ephesians,  400. 


15,  James,  26. 

19,  Peter,  loi. 

20,  24,  James,  49. 

25,  26,  James,  'ii. 

34,  Ezra,  258. 

35,  36,  Ephesians,  300. 

36,  Psalms  III.,  201. 

^40,  Peter,  228. 

48,  Peter,  228. 

LUKE  VII.,  35,  Proverbs,  119. 

39-40,  Mark,  240. 

41,  Leviticus,  171. 

42,  43,  Ephesians,  312. 

47,  Peter,  168. 

LUKE  VIII.,  10,  Matthew,  178. 

19,  James,  28,  ^2. 

2^,  Daniel,  179. 

LUKE  IX.,  22,  Peter,  266. 

26,  Romans,  35. 

31,    Psalms    III.,   302;   Peter, 

261,  266. 

32,  Daniel,  262;  Matthew,  237, 

49,  Galatians,  121. 

51-56,  II.  Kings,  12. 

54,  Mark,  83;  James,  26. 

LUKE  X.,  3,  Jeremiah  I.,  269. 

7,  Peter,  207. 

14,  John  Epistles,  211. 

15,  Jeremiah  L,  363. 


LUKE  X.—LUKR  XIX, 


200 


LUKE  X.,  17-20,  Ephesiaiis,  401 ; 
Rrrrlation,  207. 

18,  James,  24 J. 

21,  Revelation,   iji. 

34,  James,  328. 

LUKE  XL,  13,  Gahitians,  230, 
253;  Ephesians,  54. 

14-26,  Ephesians,  401. 

20,  Exodus,  430. 

21,  22,  Ephesians,  39S;  Rev- 
elation, 207. 

27,  28,  James,  374. 

28,  Peter,  319. 

29,    30,   Twelve  Prophets  IL, 

507- 

31,  James,  193;  John  Epis- 
tles, 211. 

38,  Mark,  240. 

46,  Galatians,  307. 

47,  Philippians,  177. 

49,  Mark,  354;  James,  193. 

50,  Mark,  220. 

LUKE  XIL,  I,  Mark,  376. 

4,  John  Epistles,  309. 

5,  Romans,  39. 

7,  Ezra,  87. 

8,  Revelation,  116. 

14-58,  Deuteronomy,  389. 

19,  James,  262. 

24,  27,  James,  105. 

25,  Peter,  358. 

35-40,  Philippians,  304;  Peter, 

42. 

n,  Peter,  215. 

39,  Peter,  355. 

47,  James,  271. 

LUKE  XIIL,  1-5,  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 150. 

4,  Leviticus,  171. 

7,  Galatians,  298. 

14,  Mark,  240. 


LUKE  XIIL,  16,  Song  of  Solomon, 

220. 

20,  Song  of  Solomon,   153. 

LUKE  XIV.,  11,  16,  James,   241, 

247. 

15  24,  Leviticus,  90. 

• 26,  Leviticus,  249;  Jeremiah  L, 

270;  Romans,  250. 

34'  35)  Revelation,  232. 

LUKE  XV.,  10,  Revelation,  83. 

18,  Ezra,  183. 

LUKE  XV.,  21,  Song  of  Solomon, 

241. 

2Tf,  Leviticus,  90. 

29,  Galatians,  249. 

LUKE  XVI.,  8,  Ephesians,  402. 
19-31,    Galatians,    181;    Pas- 
toral Epistles,  327;  James,  49. 

23,  II.  Corinthians,  349. 

25,  Exodus,  293. 

LUKE  XVIL,  2,  James,  351. 

12,  Mark,  44. 

iS,  IL  Kings,  258. 

26-30,  Ezekiel,  ^2. 

28-30,  James,  278. 

29,  Jeremiah  I.,  271. 

LUKE    XVIIL,   2,   John   Epistles, 

19. 

6,  Ephesians,  402. 

8,  Exodus,    106;    Thessaloni- 

ans,  309;  Peter,  ^2,2. 
II,   Daniel,  226;  Romans,  56, 

258. 

13,  Romans,  54. 

16,  Leviticus,  318. 

29,  30,  Proverbs,  ^%. 

31,  2)'^,  Isaiah  II. ,   285;  John 

t^pistles,  191,  192. 

J2,  Matthew,  413. 

LUKE  XIX.,  I -10,  Matthew,  293. 
II,  Matthew,  358. 


210 


LUKE  XIX.— LUTHER 


LUKE  XIX.,  38,  Proverbs,  335. 

LUKE  XXHL,  50,  James,  32. 

39>  40,  Matthew,    299. 

51,  Matthew,  408,  431. 

41-44,  Matthew,  300. 

LUKE  XXIV.,    12,    James,    107; 

42,  Mark,  108. 

Peter,   38. 

LUKE  XX.,  35,  Philippians,  245; 

22,  Peter,  108. 

Hebrews,  264. 

25-27,  Romans,  14. 

2^6,  Ephesians,  185. 

z-j,  Leviticus,  23. 

2t2>,  Hebrews,  228. 

34,  2>T,  Mark,  441. 

42,  Peter,  194. 

2^T,  Matthew,  199;  John  Epis- 

 47,  James,  168. 

tles,   245. 

LUKE  XXL,  4,  John  Epistles,  193. 

39,  Mark,  354;  John  Epistles, 

20,  Daniel,  loi,  283. 

^2. 

24,  Leviticus,  538. 

41,  Mark,  438;  John  Epistles, 

25,  Peter,  356. 

246 

2-j,  Revelation,  160. 

44,  Leviticus,   7;    Daniel,   98; 

28,  Ephesians,  61. 

Acts  L,  y6. 

34,  Philippians,  284. 

47,  Ephesians,   T^y;    James,  4. 

7^6,  Twelve  Prophets  H.,  314. 

48,  Matthew,  439. 

LUKE  XXn.,  4,  Acts  L,  177. 

51,  Mark,  444. 

13,  James,  241. 

LUSTS,   as  the  causes    of    strife, 

18.  Colossians,  62, 

James,   214-223. 

20,  Jeremiah  H.,  2>^2. 

their  effect  on  prayer,   James, 

24,   Matthew,    387;   John  H., 

223-225. 

yj;  James,  202. 

LUTHER,  Martin,  Romans,  229; 

26,  Ephesians,  275. 

II.  Corinthians,  80,  189;  Gala- 

 31,  32,  Mark,  414;  Galatians, 

tians,  3,  290;  Ephesians,  244; 

136;  Ephesians,  401. 

Colossians,    230,     418,    446; 

32,  Peter,  3,  2>T?i' 

James,  23,  147,  159,  203,  427, 

43,  Matthew,  404;  LIebrews,28. 

454,    457;   Peter    xvii;    John 

44,  Hebrews,  76. 

Epistles,  70. 

51,   Matthew,   405;   John  H., 

and  the  book  of  Daniel,  Dan- 

265. 

iel,  36. 

LUKE  XXHL,  1 2, Revelation,  185. 

and  the  book  of  Esther,  Ezra, 

16,  22,  Pastoral  Epistles,  75. 

351- 

2Z,  Song  of  Solomon,  122. 

and     the    Epistle    of    James, 

34,  Jeremiah  L,  4. 

Proverbs,    148. 

35,  Psalms,  216. 

defines  God,  Exodus,  292. 

43,    Acts    L,    124;    n.   Corin- 

 humbles  himself,  I.  Samuel,  94. 

thians,    349;     Pastoral   Epis- 

 Justification,  Romans,  172. 

tles,  327. 

on    the   care    of    God,    Mark, 

46,  Peter,  195. 

286. 

L  UTHER—L  YTTON 


211 


LUTHER,    on   faith    and    works, 

LYING,  Results  of  Jacob's,  Genesis, 

Exodus,  282. 

274. 

on  sin,  Psalms  II.,  131. 

to  save  life,  Joshua,  89. 

persecuted,  I.  Kings,  422. 

tongue,  Proverbs,  89, 167,  168. 

Prayer  of  Jonah,  Twelve  Proph- 

" LYONS,"  "  EPISTLE  TO  THE 

ets  II.,  512. 

CHURCH  OF,"  Acts  I.,  8. 

LUZ,  Judges,  28. 

LYSIAS,  Claudius,  Acts  II.,  429. 

LYCAONIA,  Acts  II.,  212,  265. 

LYSTRA,  Acts  II.,  200,  212-217, 

LYDIA,  Acts  II.,  278. 

260;  Pastoral  Epistles,  21,  22, 

LYING,  Ephcsians,  292. 

24. 

acted,  Acts  I.,  226. 

LYTTLETON,Jord  George,  on  the 

David,  I.  Samuel,  399. 

Conversion  of  Paul,  Acts    II., 

not    needed    for     the     attain- 

40. 

ment  of    God's  ends,  Genesis, 

LYTTON,     Bulwer,     Ecclcsiastes, 

103. 

215- 

212 


MA  A  CHA  H—MA  N 


M 


MAACHAH,  daughter  of  Talmai, 
wife  of  David,  II.  Samuel,   39. 

MACCABAEAN  PRINCES,  He- 
brews, 115. 

MACEDONIA,  St.  Paul  in,  Acts 
II.,  271-300. 

MACHPELAH,  Purchase  of.  Gene- 
sis, 229  sq. 

MACKNIGHT,  James,  Hebrews, 
248. 

MAGIC,  Pastoral  Epistles,  2i^2i- 

at  Ephesus,  Acts  II.,  352. 

Books  of,  destroyed,  Acts  II., 

355- 
MAGNIFICAT,     The,    Luke,    39- 

42;  James,  236,  22^"]. 
MAHANAIM,    David    flees  to,   II. 

Samuel,    241-252;    Psalms  I., 

325- 

the  residence  of  Ishbosheth,  II. 

Samuel,  24. 

MAHER-SH  ALAL  -  H  A  S  H  -  B  A  Z , 
Isaiah  I.,  120. 

MAINE,  Sir  Henry,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 159. 

"  Ancient  Lazu,'"  quoted,  Jere- 
miah I.,  282, 

MALACHI,  The  Book,  Twelve 
Prophets  II.,  2)^9-3,72- 

MALACHI  I.,  2,  3,  Romans,  250. 

6,  13,  Leviticus,  38. 

8,  Chronicles,  232. 

14,  Leviticus,  443. 

MALACHI  II.,  4,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets I.,  259. 

5,  Jeremiah  I.,  227. 


MALACHI  II.,  8,  Twelve  Prophets 
II.,  56. 

12,  Deuteronomy,  405;  Dan- 
iel, 190. 

15,  John  Epistles,  183. 

MALACHI  III.,  I,  Daniel,  11, 108; 
Matthew,  305;  Peter,  276. 

2,  3,  Jeremiah  I.,  148. 

4,  10,  Chronicles,  232. 

5,  James,  281. 

8,  9,  Leviticus,  166. 

8-12,  Ezra,  316. 

16,  Daniel,  322. 

17,  Ephesians,  60. 

24,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  T,y2. 

MALACHI  IV.,  I,  5,  Revelation, 
105. 

2,  Revelation,  385. 

4-6,  II.  Kings,  24. 

5,  Peter,  328. 

MALALAS,    John,    Acts    I.,   342; 

n.,  157. 

MALCHION,  James,  370. 

MALEBRANCHE,  Nicolas,  He- 
brews, 205. 

MALICE,  Colossians,  286. 

MALTA,  Acts  II.,  462. 

Paul  at.  Acts  II.,  450-471. 

MAN,  alone  able  to  approve  God's 
purpose,  Genesis,  13. 

becomes  heir  of  God  through 

death.  Genesis,  235. 

the  chief  work  of  God,  Genesis, 

II. 

the    crowning    work    of  God, 

Genesis,  13. 


MAN— MARK  I. 


213 


MAN,  to  cultivate  the  curse  of  siu 
out  of  the  world,  tieuesis,     jr. 

faculty  for  worship,  Cleuesis,  i  i . 

given    up     to     his     own     w;i\, 

Konians,  48  55. 

CIreek     and     Roman     idea     of, 

Acts  I.,  55-66. 

The  ideal,  Genesis,  64. 

inferior  to  angels,  Hebrews,  34. 

not  a  tool,  Exodus,  429. 

of  sin,  Thessalonians,  305-322. 

Pagan  view  of,  Deuteronomy, 

ior-104. 

Primitive  condition  of,  Gene- 
sis,  17. 

subject  to  more  than  one  sin, 

Genesis,  yj. 

versus  "the  Time  spirit,"  E.\o- 

dus,  27. 

What  is?  Psalms  I.,  72-74. 

without  God,  Psalms  I.,  119. 

MANASSEH,  King  of  Judah,  his 
reign  reactionary,  Deuter- 
onomy, 41. 

Idolatry,    Deuteronomy,    121; 

II.  Kings,  360-363. 

Reign  of.  Chronicles,  444-454; 

Twelve  Prophets  II.,  4-12. 

succeeds   Hezekiah,   II.   Kings, 

351-370. 

MANASSEH,  son  of  Joseph,  blessed 
by  Jacob,  Genesis,  421. 

born.  Genesis,  2i7'^- 

MANASSEH,  The  tribe,  blessed  by 
Moses,  Deuteronomy,  467. 

Inheritance    of   Ephraim   and, 

Joshua,  300-311. 

MANDEANS,  Acts  II.,  344. 

MANLINESS,  Genesis,  22;  Num- 
bers, 258. 

MANNA,  Exodus,  23S-244. 


MANNA,  Complained  of,  Numbers, 

I  2  r. 
glorilifd,  Numbers,   112. 

withdrawn,  Joshua,  123. 
MANOAH.  Prayer  of,  Judges,  27 y 

276. 
MANSKL,  II.  L.,  James,  392. 
MANS  I,     Giovanni    D.,     Councils, 

Acts  II.,  220,  259,  279. 
MANUFACTURING     among    the 

Israelites,  Deuteronomy,  362. 
MAPS,  Use  of.  Acts  II.,  100. 
MARAH,  Exodus,  226. 
MARATHON,  The  battle,  and  that 

of  Bethoron,  Joshua,  228. 
MARCELLINUS,    Pope,  Acts  II., 

144. 
MARCH,   in  the  wilderness.  Num- 
bers,  lOI. 

of  humanity.  Numbers,  98. 

Order    of  Israelites,  Numbers, 

97- 

MARCION,  and  the  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, Pastoral  Epistles,  4,  5,  8, 
10. 

and  St.  Luke's  Gospel,  Acts  I., 

10,  270. 

MARCUS  AURELIUS,  Ecclesi- 
astes,  119;  Thessalonians, 
392 ;  Pastoral  Epistles,  89, 257. 

MARGOLIOUTH,D.S.,  James,  79. 

MARIA  THERESA,  of  Voltaire, 
John  Epistles,  96. 

MARK,  Acts  II.,  252,  254,  256; 
Colossians,  388,  389;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  409,  410. 

Coincidences  with  the  Gospel  of, 

James,  312. 

MARK  I.,  12,  Joshua,  297;  Luke, 
107;  Peter,  180. 

15,  Romans,  93. 


214                                MARK  I.— 

MARK  XII, 

MARK  I.,  1 8,  Twelve  Prophets  I., 

MARK    VII.,    21,    John    Epistles, 

79- 

145- 

24,  John  I.,  233. 

MARK  VIII.,  12,  Matthew,  168. 

31,  Luke,  158;  James,  329. 

13,  Matthew,  217. 

34,  James,  184. 

15,  Exodus,  187. 

MARK  II.,  19,  Song  of  Solomon, 

31,  Peter,  266. 

45- 

34,  Jeremiah  I.,  270. 

2y,  Exodus,  310;  Jeremiah  I., 

T,?,,  James,  227. 

Z72- 

MARK    IX.,    6,    II.    Corinthians, 

MARK  III.,  8,  Twelve  Prophets  II., 

304- 

169. 

10,  Matthew,  234, 

14,  Pastoral  Epistles,  59,  219. 

• 11-13,  Revelation,  105. 

18,  James,  26. 

14,  Matthew,  245. 

21,  Jeremiah  I.,  269;  II.  Corin- 

 15,  Matthew,  246. 

thians,  191;  James,  34,  313. 

• 38-42,    Matthew,    257;    Gala- 

26,  Proverbs,  "jT)- 

tians,  121. 

31,  Jeremiah  I.,  270. 

42,  James,  351. 

2,2,  James,  28,  32. 

49,  I.  Kings,  203. 

MARK  IV.,  12,  Matthew,  178. 

MARK  X.,  21,  Leviticus,  32,?,. 

13,  James,  241. 

29,  30,  James,  236. 

15,  James,  241. 

2,7,,  Matthew,  413. 

26,  Acts  II.,  434. 

35,  James,  26. 

38,  Jeremiah  I.,  307. 

39,  Revelation,  317. 

MARK  v.,  3,  Daniel,  193. 

MARK  XL,  i-io,  John  IL,  23. 

7,  Daniel,  179. 

12-23,  James,  185,  228. 

23,  James,  329. 

2T,,  James,  122. 

25-34,  Leviticus,  311. 

24,  James,  330. 

30,  Peter,  loi. 

25,  Daniel,  226. 

MARKVL,  2,  John  II.,  75;  James, 

32,  Matthew,  195. 

193- 

MARK  XII.,  10,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

3,  James,  26,  29,  32. 

392. 

4,  James,  35. 

24,  Pastoral  Epistles,  392. 

• 8,  9,  Pastoral  Epistles,  394. 

26,  Chronicles,  15. 

II,  John  Epistles,  211. 

27,  Pastoral  Epistles,  2>^6. 

135  James,  329. 

29,  30,  Galatians,  220. 

19,  20,  Matthew,  188. 

30,  31,  Luke,  295. 

26,  Daniel,  227. 

32,  2,2»,  I-  Kings,  215. 

50,  Song  of  Solomon,  261. 

2>7,  Peter,  96. 

MARK  VII.,  8,  Colossians,  188. 

38,  John  Epistles,  293. 

15,  ^0,  23,  James,  177. 

40,  James,  168. 

19,  I.  Kings,  218. 

44,  John  Epistles,  193. 

A/A  KA'  Xrn.—MA  R  T  YRS 


215 


MARK  XIII.,  3,  James,  36. 

II,  Revelation,  3S9. 

9,  Deuteronomy,  389. 

14,    Song    of  Solomon,    118; 

Daniel,  12,  loi. 
32,    2i?i->     James,     280;     John 

Epistles,       168;       Revelation, 

253- 

35,  Romans,  2>(^2. 

MARK  XIV.,  i4>  Luke,  76. 

26,  Psalms  III.,  206. 

II,  Luke,  z^T. 

34,  Pastoral  Epistles,  136. 

2>7,  38,  Peter,  224. 

58,    Jeremiah    II.,    17;    Luke, 

62,  Daniel,  248. 

65,  Luke,  389;  Peter,  xi. 

71,  Luke,  384. 

MARK  XV.,  I,  Acts  I.,  22>i. 

6,  Acts  II.,  2i'^2. 

12,  John  II.,  312. 

2  1,  Matthew,  422, 

34,  Song  of  Solomon,  131. 

40,  James,  26. 

42,  Matthew,  387. 

MARK  XVI.,  8,  John  Epistles,  245. 
15,  Matthew,  439;  Luke,  403; 

Romans,  226. 

16,  Acts  II.,  Ti. 

17,  Acts  I.,  100. 

18,  John  Epistles,  69. 

19,  20,  Psalms  III.,  186. 

MARKLAND,      J.      H.,     Thessa- 

lonians,  288. 
MARNAS,  God  of  Gaza,   Acts  I., 

410. 
MARQUARDT,  Joachim,  Acts  II., 

104,  458. 
MARRIAGE,    Abnormal,    (k-nesis, 

57,  58. 


MARRIAGE,  as  an  iJJustration, 
Romans,  183-186. 

Christ  on,  Matthew,  268-270. 

Christian,  Ephesians,  353-365. 

Ezra  and  foreign,   Ezra,    131- 

152. 

figure    of   religion,   Isaiah  II., 

398. 

laws.  Numbers,  58. 

Loveless,  Genesis,  59;  Prov- 
erbs, 45. 

Nehemiah    and    foreign,   Ezra, 

347- 

of  expedience.  Numbers,  280. 

of  Isaac,  Genesis,  240-253. 

of  Ruth  and  Boaz,  Judges,  408- 

420. 
Paul  on,   I.  Corinthians,  161- 

176. 
purified  and  exalted  in  the  Old 

Testament,  Isaiah  II.,  400. 

a  safeguard,  Proverbs,  69-71. 

Second,       Pastoral      Epistles, 

122,  125. 
a  serious  undertaking.  Judges, 

285. 
a    test    of  the    uniqueness    of 

Hebrew    prophecy,   Isaiah   IL, 

7(y,  398. 
with  unbelievers,  Joshua,  385; 

Chronicles,   402;   IL  Corinthi- 
ans, 240-246. 
MARSEILLES,  Acts  IL,  374,  390. 
MARTHA  AND  MARY,  Luke,  306- 

316. 
MARTIAL,  ^>/^^7Wj-,  Acts  I.,  312. 
NLARTVROLOGIES,  James,  31. 
MARTVROLOGIliM    ROMANUM, 

Acts  I.,  325. 
MARTYRS,   Revelation,  98  104. 
Three  classes  of,  Acts  I.,    t^it^. 


216 


MARY— MATTHEW  V, 


MARY,  Sister  of  Lazarus,  anoints 
Christ,  Matthew,  382-3S4; 
Mark,  359363;  John  II.,  1-17. 

commended,  John  II.,  10-16. 

MARY,  The  Virgin,  Luke,  47-66. 

Annunciation  to,  Luke,  50,  55, 

59- 

at  Cana,  Luke,  64. 

at  Capernaum,  Luke,  65. 

at  the  Cross,  Luke,  66;   John 

11-,  319-331- 

• interrupts     Christ,    Matthew, 

168-172. 

Reticence  of,  Luke,  58. 

Song  of,  Luke,  39-42. 

Song    of  Hannah    and    of,    I. 

Samuel,  31. 

undue  exaltation  of,  Luke,  53. 

visits  Elizabeth,  Luke,  36. 

MASON,  Arthur  James,  Diocletian 

Persecution,  Acts  II.,  367. 
MASS,   Sacrifices  of  the,  Hebrews, 

134- 

MASSUTIUS,  Acts  II.,  11,  55,  60. 

MATERIALISxM,  Job,  54. 

and    religious    faith.    Judges, 

114;  Isaiah  I.,  175. 

in  France,  Deuteronomy,  213, 

214. 

MATTHEW,  See  LEVI. 

Christ's  call  to,  Mark,  56-61. 

MATTHEW,  The  Gospel,  Coinci- 
dences with,  James,  310. 

for  the  Jew,  Matthew,  3. 

the  Genesis  of  the  New  Testa- 
ment, Matthew,  4. 

in  its  natural  order,  Matthew, 

3- 
MATTHEW  I.,  I,  Romans,  16. 
5,  Joshua,  154;  Hebrews,  261; 

James,  157. 


MATTHEW  I.,  12,  II.  Kings.  435; 
Jeremiah  II.,  92. 

19,  James,  32. 

20,  Revelation,  200. 

21,  Romans,  372. 

27^,  Revelation,  385. 

25,  James,  31. 

MATTHEW  II.,  15,  Isaiah  II., 
268. 

16,  Revelation,  202. 

18,  Jeremiah  II.,  335. 

MATTHEW  HI.,  i,  Joshua,  297. 

3,  Isaiah  II.,  6;  Luke,  215. 

6,  Acts  I.,  146. 

8,  9,  Leviticus,  166. 

9,    Jeremiah  I.,    124;   Ezekiel, 

292;  Galatians,  181. 

15,  Luke,  98. 

17,  Leviticus,  172;  Luke,  215. 

MATTHEW  IV.,  i,  Joshua,  297. 

4,  Revelation,  204. 

5,  Daniel,  284. 

8,  James,  229. 

13,  Jeremiah  I.,  7. 

21,  James,  26. 

23,  Acts  I.,  272. 

MATTHEW  v.,  3,  Romans,  345. 

8,  Revelation,  195. 

II,  12,  James,  64,  294. 

14,  16,  Leviticus,  476;  Revela- 
tion, 181,  365. 

17,   18,  Hebrews,  63. 

18,  Leviticus,  9. 

20,  Galatians,  343. 

21,  22,  James,  222. 

22,  Deuteronomy,  389;  James, 

155- 

2^,  James,  222. 

Ty2,  Exodus,  303. 

2>7,-?iy,  Luke,  384. 

38-42,  Leviticus,  483. 


MATTHEW  v.— 

MATTHEW  XII.                   217 

MATTHEW  v.,  42,  Pastoral  Kpis 

MATTHEW  X.,   16,  James,  102. 

tlrs,  320. 

17,  Deuteronomy,  389. 

43,  44,    I.    Kings,    101;    l.iiko, 

18-20,  Ephcsians,  428. 

343;  James,  67. 

19,  Acts  I.,  183. 

45,  Exodus,  104;  Sonp:  of  Solo- 

 20,  Galatians,  253. 

mon,  208. 

21,  25,  Mark,  220. 

MATTHEW    VI.,    i,   Danid,    195; 

22,  II.  Corinthians,  20. 

H.Corinthians,  283;  Peter,  y\. 

28,  John  Epistles,  309. 

2,  5,  16,  James,  84. 

34,  Song  of  Solomon,  142. 

7,  Ezra,  i8i. 

35»  Ezra,  151. 

14,  James,  352- 

2,-],  Ezra,  151. 

22,  Proverbs,  47. 

40,  Revelation,  389. 

23,  Revelation,  232. 

42,  Leviticus,  180. 

24,  Exodus,  293 ;  Romans,  250. 

MATTHEW  XL,  5,  Leviticus,  331 ; 

28,  30.  James,  85. 

James,  49. 

29,  Chronicles,  172;  Ezra,  50. 

II,    Galatians,     250;     Revela- 

 12^,  Leviticus,   224;   I.   Kings, 

tion,  102. 

125. 

12,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  230. 

45,  John  Epistles,  119. 

19,  Proverbs,  119. 

MATTHEW  VH.,  i,  James,  293. 

21,  22,  Jeremiah  II.,  51. 

1-5,    Galatians,    395;    James, 

22,  24,  John  Epistles,  211. 

251. 

23,  Song  of  Solomon,  134. 

5,  James,  352. 

25,  Daniel,  202. 

6,   Proverbs,  126;  Revelation, 

27,  Revelation,  326. 

384- 

29,      n.     Corinthians,      292; 

15,  Revelation,  228. 

James,  81 ;  John  Epistles,  309. 

16-18,  James,  183. 

MATTHEW  XIL,  4,  Exodus,  310; 

21-23,  James,  137. 

Leviticus,  10. 

24-27,  James,  loi. 

7,  I.  Kings,  215. 

. 27,  Peter,  228. 

17,  Isaiah  IL,  6. 

MATTHEW  VHL,  4,  Leviticus,  9. 

19,  20,  L  Kings,  397. 

5-13,  Acts  n.,  105. 

20,  Galatians,  395;  John  Epis- 

 10,  Mark,  353. 

tles,  232. 

17,  Isaiah  II.,   6,   352;   Peter, 

2-j,  Pastoral  Epistles,  326. 

lOI. 

2^2^,    Ephesians,    296;    James, 

MATTHEW  IX.,  13,  I.  Kings,  215; 

183. 

Mark,  59. 

2^6,    Ephesians,    297;    James, 

23,  Jeremiah  I.,  202, 

314- 

2>li  38.  Revelation,  253. 

39, 'James,  227. 

MATTHEW  X.,  2,  James,  26. 

39,    41,  Twelve  Prophets  IL, 

3,  James,  26. 

507;  Pastoral  Epistles,  358. 

218 


MA  TTHE  W  XII.— MA  TTHE  W  XXII. 


MATTHEW  XII.,  40,  Twelve 
Prophets  II.,  507. 

41,  42,  John  Epistles,  211. 

42,    Chronicles,    172;    James, 

193- 

43,  Proverbs,  130. 

46,  James,  28,  32. 

MATTHEW  XIII.,  26,  Revelation, 
160. 

29,  30,  Revelation,  253. 

30,  Revelation,  154. 

32,  Revelation,  253. 

35,  Ephesians,  129. 

2,^,  Mark,  iii. 

39,  Leviticus,  460,  470. 

41,  Galatians,  299;  Revela- 
tion, 258. 

43,  Daniel,  324. 

48,  Ephesians,  296. 

49,  50,  Revelation,  258. 

54,  James,  193. 

55,  James,  26,  29,  32. 

MATTHEW  XIV.,  y6,  Leviticus, 
10. 

II,  12,  Luke,  104. 

MATTHEW  XV.,  1-9,  Acts  II.,  15. 

y6,  Leviticus,  14. 

5,  6,  Leviticus,  551. 

6,  Jeremiah  I.,  176. 

7-9,  I.  Kings,  220. 

18,  Proverbs,  166. 

19,  Proverbs,  58. 

MATTHEW  XVI.,  4,  James,  227. 

13,  Daniel,  248. 

13-16,  Acts  II.,  loi. 

15-18,  Ephesians,  11. 

18,  Peter,  70;  Revelation,  357. 

19,  Acts  I.,  147. 

21,  Peter,  266. 

22,  John  Epistles,  293. 

24,Philippians,284;  Peter,  99. 


MATTHEW    XVI.,     26,    Joshua, 

260. 

27,  Proverbs,  159. 

MATTHEW  XVII.,  5,  James,  26. 

20,  James,  330. 

24,  Mark,  240. 

MATTHEW  XVIII.,  6,  James,  351. 

7,  Leviticus,  442. 

9,  Galatians,  278. 

16,  II.  Corinthians,  2>73- 

17,  Mark,  158. 

19,  Daniel,  151. 

22,  Peter,  169. 

23-35,  Leviticus,  171. 

25,  II.  Kings,  43. 

35,  Proverbs,  319. 

MATTHEW    XIX.,    8,    Leviticus, 

404;    Deuteronomy,    404;    II. 

Corinthians,    128;    Galatians, 

219. 

23,  24,  James,  49,  8t,- 

29,  Leviticus,  224;  Daniel,  222. 

MATTHEW  XX.,  2,  Revelation,  92. 

3j  6,  James,  156. 

20,  Mark,  St,. 

MATTHEW  XXL,  13,  Jeremiah  L, 

159- 

16,  Peter,  74. 

19,  Jeremiah  I.,  180. 

21,    James,    122;    Revelation, 

141. 

T,T„  Hebrews,  32. 

42-44,    Daniel,    161;   Pastoral 

Epistles,  392. 

MATTHEW  XXII.,  1-14,  Leviti- 
cus, 91;  Song  of  Solomon,  45. 

2,  Revelation,  ;^22. 

3,  Proverbs,  124. 

12,  Revelation,  353. 

14,  Revelation,  175. 

T,2,  Pastoral  Epistles,  326. 


MATTHEW  XXII.- 

■MA  TTHE  W  XXVII.            219 

MATTHEW   XXII.,     3440,    Acts 

MATTHEW     XXIV.,      29,    Peter, 

II.,  15;  Peltr,  90. 

35^ 

>;  Revelation,   106. 

41-46,  Psalms  III.,  i8j;  Kpht- 

30, 

Daniel,    248;    Revelation, 

sians,  91 . 

160. 

43,   Psalms  111.,   1S5. 

31, 

Thessalonians,   174. 

• 45.  IIfl)rc-\vs,   114;  Revelation, 

35, 

Hebrews,  63,  Peter,  357. 

385- 

36, 

Leviticus,  15. 

MATTHFVV  XXIII.,  3,  James,  16S. 

37-39,  James,  278;  Peter,  332. 

8,  Peter,  120. 

42, 

Peter,  329. 

10,  Peter,  236. 

44, 

James,  102. 

II,  Peter,  121. 

MATTHEW  XXV.,  10,  Revelation, 

12,  James,  247. 

384. 

13-36,  James,  276. 

19, 

Romans,  362,  386. 

23,  Leviticus,  563. 

31, 

Hebrews,  26. 

29,  Jeremiah  I.,  314. 

31- 

46,  Revelation,  346. 

32,  Romans,  290. 

34, 

Ephesians,  27. 

33-35,  Jeremiah  I.,   363;   Ro- 

 41, 

Leviticus,  559;  Ephesians, 

mans,  292. 

401 

;  Peter,  289. 

34,    James,    193;    Revelation, 

MATTHEW  XXVI.,  2,  Mark,  360. 

291. 

3,  ' 

\cts  II.,  32. 

35,  Psalms  II.,  401 ;  Jeremiah 

12, 

Mark,  363. 

II.,    304;  James,   2,2;  Revela- 

 26, 

27,  Revelation,  324. 

tion,  310. 

28, 

II.  Corinthians,  116. 

2,7,  Jeremiah  I.,    102;  James, 

30, 

Psalms  HI.,  206. 

294. 

2>^, 

I.  Kings,  406. 

38,  Galatians,  297. 

38, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  136. 

MATTHEW   XXIV.,    i,    2,  Peter, 

39, 

Leviticus,  56. 

193- 

41, 

Romans,  222. 

3-27,  John  Epistles,  211. 

46, 

Luke,  381. 

5,  8-12,  Ephesians,  412. 

53, 

John  II.,  272. 

6,   7,  Daniel,  320;  Revelation, 

(>3, 

64,  James,  308. 

90. 

64, 

Mark,  53,  352. 

II,  Thessalonians,  309. 

64, 

John  Epistles,  211. 

13,  Revelation,  127. 

67, 

Isaiah  II.,  285;  Peter,   xi. 

14,  Leviticus,  472. 

74, 

Luke,  384. 

15,  Daniel,  12,  loi,  283,  286. 

MATTHEW    XXVII.,    9,    Twelve 

21,  22.,  Ephesians,  340. 

Pre 

)phets  II.,  450. 

22,  Numbers,  40;  Daniel,  264. 

18, 

Peter,  63. 

24,  Thessalonians,   309;   Rev- 

 25, 

Romans,  296. 

elation,  229. 

54, 

Acts  II.,  106. 

27,  Hebrews,  1S8. 

55» 

Peter,  108. 

220 


MA  TTHE  W  XX  VII.  —MER  C  V 


MATTHEW  XXVII.,    56,    James, 

26. 

59,  John  Epistles,  245. 

63,  John  Epistles,  293. 

66,  Ephesians,  53. 

MATTHEW  XXVIH.,  10,  James,  4, 

29. 

13,  John  Epistles,  247. 

18,  Leviticus,  199;  Peter,  145. 

19,    Acts    II.,    y^;    II.    Corin- 
thians, Sy. 
20,     Pastoral    Epistles,     333; 

Revelation,  44,  131. 
MATTHIAS,  Election  of,  Acts  I., 

61-81. 
MAURICE,  F.  D.,  Acts  II.,   206; 

James,  64. 
MAYOR,  J.  B.,  James,  115. 
MAZZINI,  Giuseppe,  Isaiah  I.,  84- 

86;  II.,  259;  Twelve  Prophets 

I.,  89. 
M'CAUL,  A.,  0/d  Paths,  Romans, 

69. 
MEAT-OFFERING,  Leviticus,  63- 

81 ;  Numbers,  180. 
MEATH,      Lord,    John    Epistles, 

200,  201. 
MECHITARITES,  Acts  I.,  viii. 
MEDAD,Eldad  and,  Numbers,  130. 
MEDE,  Joseph,  Acts  I.,  64,  67,  84. 
MEDIA,  Isaiah  II.,  107. 
MEDIATOR,    Christ    a,  Hebrews, 

137- 

Desire  for  a,  Job,  147. 

Idea  of  a,  Deuteronomy,  109, 

no. 
of  the  New  Covenant,  Hebrews, 

302. 
MEEKNESS,  Proverbs,  172,  210; 

Galatians,      387;    Colossians, 

311;  James,  196-198. 


MEGIDDO,  Joshua,  303;  Jere- 
miah I.,  317. 

MELCHISEDEK,  Genesis,  128- 
131;  Hebrews,  75,  79,  88,  135, 
156. 

Allegory  of,  Hebrews,  109-130. 

a  title.  Genesis,  131. 

MELITO,  Bishop  of  Sardis,  Peter, 
xiii. 

MELVILLE,  Henry,  Acts  II.,  114. 

MEMORY     and    life,    Colossians, 

474- 

MENAHEM,  King  of  Israel,  II. 
Kings,  221-226. 

MENANDER,  Acts  II.,  11. 

MENDICANT  ORDERS,  Acts  II., 
227. 

MENEPHTAH,  Death  of  the  son 
of,  Exodus,  193. 

the    Pharaoh    of  the  Exodus, 

Exodus,  90. 

Tomb  of,  Exodus,  161-166. 

MEPHIBOSHETH,  David  and,  II. 
Samuel,  134-145,  297. 

Zibah  and,  II.  Samuel,  242. 

MEPHISTOPHELES,  Job,  36. 

MERAB,  daughter  of  Saul,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 302. 

MERARITES,  Duties  of  the,  Num- 
bers, 44. 

MERCHANT,  The,  has  an  honor- 
able      career,      Deuteronomy, 

369- 
Vocation  of  the,  Isaiah  I.,  296, 

297. 
MERCIES  of  God,  I.  Samuel,  105; 

Psalms  III.,  159. 
MERCY,  and  faithfulness,  Psalms 

I.,  348- 

Covenant  and,  Ezra,  178. 

Peace  and,  Galatians,  447. 


MERCY— MICAH  IV. 


221 


MERCY,  Trust  in  God's,    Psalms 

I.,   121. 

^ERCY  SEAT,  The.  Exodus,  7,77; 
Hebrews,  154. 

MERIBAH,  Exodus,  249-252; 
Psalms  III.,  148. 

MERIT,  No  hope  in  human,  Ro- 
mans, 78-83. 

MERIVALE,  Dean  C,  Hebrews,  96, 

195- 
MERODACH-BALADAN,      Isaiah 

I.,  200,  376. 

and  Hezekiah,  II.  Kings,  315. 

defeated,  II.  Kings,  323. 

MERGE,  Acts  I.,  412. 

MEROM,   Battle  of,  Joshua,  2t,6- 

248. 
MERX,  Adalbert,  on  Joel,  Twelve 

Prophets  II.,  394-396,  436. 
MESOPOTAMIA,    Isaiah    II.,   51, 

56. 
MESSAGE,  The  Divine,  Numbers, 

219. 
MESSIAH,  Isaiah  I.,  89,  90,   115 

sq.  129,  131-144,  i8osq.,249; 

Ezekiel,   304-321;   Daniel,   69; 

Twelve  Prophets  I.,  408-418; 

Hebrews,  35,  114. 

the  anointed,  I.  Samuel,  147. 

Conspiracy     against.    Psalms 

I.,  13. 

Hope    for  a,   Chronicles,   299- 

310. 

in  type,  Chronicles,  131. 

Kingdom  of,  Acts  I.,  27. 

of    David,    II.    Samuel,     366 

375. 

of  Isaiah,  II.  Kings,  269. 

of  the  Psalmist,  Psalms  II.,  90, 

329- 
prophesied,  Deuteronomy,339, 


MESSIAH, referred  to  by  Balaam? 
Numbers,  311. 

referred  to  by  Hannah,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 35. 

universal  dominion.  Psalms  I., 

i8. 

METAPHORS  of  James,  James, 
86,  88. 

METAPHRASTES,  Simeon,  Acts 
I.,  vl.,  218. 

MEYER,  H.  A.  W.,  Acts  I.,  98, 
217,  230;  II.,  342;  Romans, 
261;  II.  Corinthians,  65,  137, 
139,  149,  165,  239,  267,  317, 
374;  Galatians,  95,  116,  217, 
229,  274,  ;i2?>',  Ephesians,  4, 
42,  48,  359,  416;  Philippians, 
ii7»  173;  James,  32,  390. 

MICAH  OF  MT.  EPHRAIM, 
Judges,  336. 

MICAH,  the  prophet,  of  the  reign 
of  Manasseh,  II.  Kings,  364. 

MICAH,  the  book.  Twelve  Proph- 
ets, 357-438. 

MICAH  I.,  4,  Psalms  III.,  63; 
Peter,  357. 

7,  Revelation,  290. 

10-16,  II.  Kings,  299. 

12,  Jeremiah  II.,  329. 

MICAH  II.,  9,  Ezekiel,  312. 

12,  Ezekiel,  314. 

MICAH  HI.,  5,  II.  Kings,  463. 

8,  Ezekiel,  120. 

10,  Proverbs,  26;  Jeremiah  II., 

276;  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  146. 

II,  II.  Kings,  397,  463. 

12,  Psalms  II.,  399;  Jeremi.ih 

II.,  23;  Daniel,  81. 

MICAH  IV.,  I,  2,  II.  Kings,  263; 
Jeremiah  II.,  107;  Peter,   t,^,. 

2,  Jeremiah  I,,  85. 


222                              MICAU IV. 

—MILTON 

MICAH     IV.,      4,    Deuteronomy, 

MIDIANITES,     Defeat      of     the, 

364. 

Judges,    178-194- 

5,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  74. 

Modern,  Judges,  139. 

9,  Jeremiah  I.,  184. 

Number     of     the,      Numbers, 

11-13,  Ezekiel,  2>7^' 

368. 

13,  Psalms  III.,  63. 

plot  against  Israel,  Numbers, 

MICAH    v.,    I,    II.    Kings,     239; 

313- 

Jeremiah  I.,  119. 

to  be  vexed.  Numbers,  318. 

1-6,  Ezekiel,  311. 

War  with  the.  Numbers,  365. 

2,  Chronicles,  144;  John  Epis- 

MIDRASH, James,  420. 

tles,  82. 

MIGRATION    of  Abraham    for  a 

3,  Ezekiel,  314. 

spiritual  cause.  Genesis,  85. 

5,  Jeremiah  I.,  90;  II.,  100. 

of  Israel    to    Egypt    of  great 

7,  Isaiah  II.,  307. 

importance.  Genesis,  321. 

MICAH  VI.,  I,  Isaiah  I.,  17. 

of  nations.  Genesis,  St,. 

3,  Jeremiah  I.,  81. 

MILETUS,  Acts  II.,  405. 

6-8,  I.   Kings,   212;  Jeremiah 

Paul  at.  Acts  II.,  405-421. 

II.,  35;  Ezekiel,  463. 

MILITARISM  in  Numbers,  Num- 

 7,  11,  Kings,  T,7. 

bers,  17. 

■ 8,  Psalms  I.,  138;  Jeremiah  I., 

MILL,  John  Stuart,  Ezekiel,  340; 

207. 

Acts    I.,   132;   I.   Corinthians 

10,  II,  Leviticus,  415. 

208;   Pastoral     Epistles,    39; 

16,  II.  Kings,  145. 

John  Epistles,  119,  123. 

MICAH  VH.,  1-20,  n.  Kings,  356. 

on  creation.  Genesis,  9;  Job, 

5,  Jeremiah  I.,  192. 

257- 

MICAIAH,  son  of  Imlah,  I.  Kings, 

MILLES,  Bishop  Thomas,  Acts  I., 

459,  490-493- 

67. 

MICHAL,  aids  David  to  escape,  I. 

MILLIGAN,  Wm.,   Pastoral  Epis- 

Samuel, 307. 

tles,  117. 

David  married  to,  I.  Samuel, 

on  The  Res7c?'rectwn,  Acts  II., 

303- 

134- 

restored  to  David,  II.  Samuel, 

MILMAN,  Henry,  Jeremiah  II.,  91, 

44-46. 

152;  Acts  I.,  217. 

MICHMASH,    Jonathan's  exploit 

MILTON,  John,  Proverbs,  59,  69, 

at,  I.  Samuel,  218-228. 

III,  133,  316,  2,67;  Ecclesias- 

MICROCOSM     and     Macrocosm, 

tes,  209;  Song  of  Solomon,  88; 

Job,  402. 

Isaiah  II.,   259;  Jeremiah  II., 

MIDIAN,    Moses    in.  Exodus,   39- 

102;    Daniel,    139,    140,    163, 

88;  Hebrews,  253. 

197;    Mark,     13,    272;    Gala- 

MIDIANITES,  Numbers,  261. 

tians,  259;  Colossians,  76,  91; 

conquer  Israel,  Judges,  138. 

John  Epistles,  227. 

MILTON— MIRACLES  OF  CHRIST 


223 


Mil  TON, 


DiiiUr 


Proverbs, 


the      Purita 
oiioniw    i()J  195. 
Satan    of.    Job,    ^55 

5')- 

MININt;,  Job,  314. 

MINISTERING  TO  THE  SAINTS, 
Hebrews,  192,  313. 

MINISTRY      and     the     prophet, 
Chronicles,  259. 

Call  to  the,  Isaiah  I.,  yG-y^. 

Duties  of  the,  Numbers,  212. 

Educational  work  of,  Chroni- 
cles, 222)- 

Influence     of    a    high-minded, 

Deuteronomy,  2»^y . 

not  a  profession,  Jeremiah  II., 

104. 

not  to  be  secluded,  Joshua,3o8. 

Objectors  to  a  regular,  Deuter- 
onomy, 330. 

Origin   of  the  Christian,   Pas- 
toral Epistles,  104-117. 

A  paid.  Chronicles, 

265. 

Provision    for    the, 

399- 
St.    Paul    and   the,    Acts    II., 

385-421;    I.    Corinthians,   97- 

112;  Colossians,  132-150. 
Support  of  the,  I.  Corinthians, 

195-209. 

An  unworthy,  Judges,  344, 

MIRACLES,  Hebrews,  30  sq.  306. 
and    natural    law,    I.   Samuel, 

99,  100. 
of  Christ,   Matthew,  105-131; 

John  II.,  142-144,  423-426. 
of  Christ  and  Moses  compared. 

Exodus,  132. 
of  Christ  not  creative,  Exodus, 

125;  Mark,  181. 


2^%,    263- 

Numbers, 


MIRACLES,  of  Moses,  Exodus, 
y2,    121-170. 

MIRACLES  OF  CHRlSr,  Mat- 
thew, 105-131;  Mark,  2438, 
I  29-161;  Luke,  255-280. 

At  the  marriage  in  Cana,  John 

I..  67-84. 

Blind  man  of  Bethsaida,  Mark, 

213-216. 

The  Centurion's  servant,  Mat- 
thew, 109-111;  Luke,  195- 
208. 

The  deaf  and  dumb  man,  Mark, 

200-204. 

Death    vanquished,    Matthew, 

122-128. 

The  demoniac  boy,  Mark,  238- 

247. 
—The  demoniac  of  Gadara,  Mark, 

141-151. 
Demons    cast    out,    Matthew, 

117,  118;  Mark,  28-33. 

Feedingthefivethousand,  Mat- 

•  thevv,    192,    193;    Mark,    176- 

183;   Luke,  269-280;  John  L, 

208. 
Feeding    the    four    thousand, 

Mark,  205-208. 
The   fever   patient,    Matthew, 

111-113. 
Jairus'  daughter,   Mark,    151- 

161. 
Lazerus  raised,   John   I.,  351- 

The    leper    healed,     Matthew, 

107-109;  Mark,  42-46;  Luke, 
260. 

Lost  faculties  restored,  Mat- 
thew, 1 28-13 1. 

The  man   at   Bethsaida,  John 

L,  175-187. 


224 


MIRACLES  OF  CHRIST— MOHAMMED  AN 


MIRACLES  OF  CHRIST,  The 
man  blind  from  birth,  John  I., 
301-317. 

Miraculous    draught    of    fish, 

Luke,  166-174. 

The  nobleman's  son,  John  I., 

159-173- 
Peter's    mother  in-law,     Luke, 

158. 
The  sick   of  the  palsy,   Mark, 

47-52. 
■ Sins    forgiven,   Matthew,    118- 

121. 
• The    storm    stilled,     Matthew, 

115-117,  197-202;  Mark,  133- 

140. 
The  withered  hand,  Mark,  71- 

74- 

MIRIAM,  Death  of.  Numbers,  223. 

Jealousy    of,    Numbers,     136- 

141. 

Pharaoh's  daughter  and.  Exo- 
dus, 32. 

Punishment        of,       Numbers, 

147. 

MIRTH,  Wisdom  better  than,  Ec- 
clesiastes,  139. 

MISANTHROPE,  The,  Proverbs, 
240. 

MISCHIEF,  Proverbs,  169,  170. 

MISOPOGON,  Acts  II.,  159- 

MISSIONS,  Pastoral  Epistles, 
193-198. 

and  the  Atonement,  John  Epis- 
tles, 1 06- 1 16. 

Christian       generosity       and. 

Proverbs,  45. 

in  Africa,  Thessalonians,  157, 

158- 

methods  not  to  be  criticised, 

Thessalonians,  96. 


MISSIONS,  Necessity  of  a  healthy 
independence.  Acts  I.,  200. 

Principle    of    work,    Romans, 

278. 

MISTAKES,  Education  in,  John  I., 
I  278. 

!   MISUNDERSTANDINGS,  Genesis, 
j  410;    Proverbs,    200;    Twelve 

Prophets  I.,  319. 
j   MITHRA,  Worship  of,  Ezra,   35; 
I  Acts  I.,  32;  II.,  35. 

MIVART,  St.  George,  Genesis  of 
species.  Acts  L,  60. 

MIXED  MULTITUDE,  Numbers, 
121. 

MIZPAH,  Judges,  236,  237. 

Gedaliah     murdered     at,     II. 

Kings,  470. 

Samuel    calls    the    people,    I. 

Samuel,  93. 

MNASON,  Acts  II.,  426. 

MOAB,  Isaiah  I.,  94,  273;  Jere- 
miah II.,  234-241 ;  Ezekiel,  226, 
227;  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  132. 

David  wars  against,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 112,  113. 

Invasion   of,  II.  Kings,  29-39. 

overrun  by  Amorites,  Num- 
bers, 254, 

Plains  of.  Numbers,  260. 

revolt     against    Ahaziah,    II. 

Kings,  5-7. 

MOABITE  STONE,  Deuteronomy, 
136,  169;  I.  Kings,  339.451; 
Ezekiel,  226. 

MOHAMMED,  on  love,  I.  Corin- 
thians, 300. 

MOHAMMEDAN,  Acts  I.,  314, 
402. 

contempt  for  women,   Ecclesi- 

astes,  204. 


MO  HA  MMEDAN— MOSES 


225 


MOHAMMEDAN,     Conversion    of 

MONOTHEISM,   moral  and  polit- 

the, Twelve  Prophets  II.,  53.S. 

ical  advantages,  Isaiah  I.,  108- 

Decay,  Deuteronomy,  211. 

1 1 0. 

method    of   slaughter,    Leviti- 

 of    Israel    defined,    Isaiah    II., 

cus,  37.5. 

3640,   129,   149. 

origin    and    Hebrews,    Deuter- 

MONTANISTS, Acts  I.,  154;  Pas- 

onomy, 157,  161. 

toral  Epistles,  70,  115. 

prophet,  Deuteronomy,  341. 

MONTGOMERY,  James,  Romans, 

religion,  John  Epistles,  iii. 

235- 

slavery,  John  Epistles,  182. 

MONUMENTA      FRANCISCANA, 

MOHLER,  John  A.,  Symbolism,  I. 

Acts  I.,  163. 

Corinthians,  264. 

MORAL  severity,  Numbers,  370. 

MOLECH,   Worship  of,  Leviticus, 

MORALITY,  Civilization  without, 

T.'&'j;  11.  Kings,  362. 

Numbers,  t^ti. 

MOLINOS,    Miguel    de.    Acts    II., 

Decay  of,  Twelve  Prophets  I., 

446. 

255-268. 

MOLL,    Dr.    A.,    on    Hypnotism, 

—Heathen  lack  of,  Ezra,  105. 

Acts  I.,  100,  123,  230,  360. 

progressive.  Exodus,  23. 

MOMMSEN,    Acts    II.,    96,    103, 

MORALS,      Paul     on     Christian, 

140,  150,  281,  2>7^^  468. 

Ephesians,  259-351. 

MONASTICISM,    Celtic,  Acts  XL, 

MORDECAI,  Ezra,  379,  384,  392- 

88. 

404. 

MONEY  and  the  church,  II.  Corin- 

MORE, Sir  Thomas,  Ecclesiastes, 

thians,  263. 

303;  Jeremiah  II.,  102. 

and  sympathy,  John  I.,  16. 

MOREHOUSE,      Bishop     James, 

Danger  in  the  love    of,    John 

James,  345. 

II.,  102;  Acts  I.,  227. 

MORINUS,  Jean,  Exerc.  Bibl.',  \cts 

MONICA,  St.,  James,  358- 

II.,  13. 

MONOD,    Adolph,  Ephesians,  68, 

MORLEY,  John,  on  Dante,  Deuter- 

107, 138,  344- 

onomy,  488. 

MONOTHEISM,        Judges,       2,2; 

on  the  origin  of  Christianity, 

Isaiah  II.,  88,  236-251. 

Numbers,  88. 

and  the  creation.  Genesis,  8. 

MOSES,  Exodus,  26-442. 

and  the  imagination,  Isaiah  II., 

acted    for  Jehovah,   Numbers, 

95- 

92,  162. 

diffused  by  Abraham,  Genesis, 

and  Aaron  meet,  Exodus,  &y. 

81. 

and  the  burning  bush,  Exodus, 

growth    in    Israel,    Isaiah    I., 

43-64- 

357,  363- 

and  Dathan,  Numbers,  205. 

in      the     Decalogue,     Deuter- 

 and    his    success    late    in    life, 

onomy,  T]. 

Joshua,  II. 

226 


MOSES— MO  TIVES 


MOSES,  and  his  successor,  Joshua, 

37-47- 

and  Isaiah,  Numbers,  146. 

and  Jethro,  Exodus,  259-263. 

and  Korah,  Numbers,  204. 

and  the  vision  of  God,  Exo- 
dus, 437-439- 

at  the  rock,  Numbers,  225. 

at  the  transfiguration,  Mat- 
thew,  238. 

appeals    to  Hobab,  Numbers, 

105. 

Authority  of,  Numbers,  203. 

Blessing      of,      Deuteronomy, 

460-470. 

career  guided  by  God,  Joshua, 

9- 

Character     of,    Deuteronomy, 

474-490. 

Choice  of.  Exodus,  34-38. 

close      of    his    life.    Numbers, 

313- 
Coalition    against.    Numbers, 

204. 

Comeliness  of,  Hebrews,  239. 

Commission    of,    Exodus,    65- 

69. 

Death  of,  Deuteronomy,  490, 

491. 

encouraged   by  God,   Exodus, 

99-1 1 1. 

Faith  of.  Numbers,  336;  He- 
brews, 233. 

Farewell  speeches  of,  Deuter- 
onomy, 433-451- 

Fear  of,  Hebrews,  300. 

Genealogy  of,  Exodus,  108. 

Generalship  of,  Joshua,  10. 

Great  offer  to,  Numbers,  167. 

hesitates  to  return  to  Egypt, 

Exodusj  70-79. 


MOSES,  his  communion  with  God, 

Numbers,  76. 

in  Midian,  Exodus,  39  88. 

inferior  to  Christ,  Hebrews,  55. 

Inner  life  of,  Hebrews,  237. 

intercedes  for  Israel,  Numbers, 

206. 

Judgment  of.  Numbers,  228. 

Magnanimity      of.     Numbers, 

133- 

the  man  of  God,  Joshua,  266. 

mediatorship,      Deuteronomy, 

106-115. 

Miracles  of.  Exodus,  72. 

Mission  of,  Hebrews,  236. 

no  priest.  Numbers,  6. 

not  the  hero  of  Numbers,  Num- 
bers, 2. 

obeys  the  call  of  God,  Exodus, 

79-88. 

Parents  of,  Exodus,  28. 

Position  of.  Numbers,  142. 

prays  for  death,  Numbers,  128. 

rebukes  Reuben  and  Gad,  Num- 
bers, 374. 

refused  by  Pharaoh,   Exodus, 

89. 

Reverence  for.  Numbers,  16. 

Song     of.    Exodus,    216-225; 

Deuteronomy,  452-460. 

Stephen's  account  of,  Hebrews, 

245- 

steward  of  Christ,  Hebrews,  54. 

Strain  on,  as  leader.  Numbers, 

125. 
with  Aaron  at  the  last,   Num.- 

bers,  240. 

Work  of,  Joshua,  58. 

MOTHERHOOD,  Judges,  268. 
MOTIVES,     mixture     of,    Philip- 

pians,  53. 


MOTIVES— 

MYSTERIES                           22'; 

MOTIVES,  Paul  appeals  to  high, 

MURDER,    condemned,    Matthew, 

II.  Corinthians,  382. 

72,^  74- 

wrongly    imputed,    II.    Corin- 

 The  first.  Genesis,  29-39. 

thians,  i2,  ii. 

forbidden.    Exodus,    315-319; 

MOULE,    H.    C.    G.,     Ephesians, 

Proverbs,  90. 

403- 

Involuntary,  Joshua,  :>ilo-ST^2. 

MOUNT  OF  OLIVES,  Prophecy  of 

No  satisfaction  for,  Leviticus, 

Christ  on  the,  Matthew,  339- 

115,  116. 

375- 

of  Abel,  Genesis,  29-39. 

MOUNT  SEIR,  Chronicles,  81. 

MURMURING  against  God,  Num- 

MOUNT ZION,  Psalms  II.,  93-96, 

bers,  118. 

284,  472,  474;  Hebrews,  153, 

at  what  displeases  us,  Philip- 

292-309. 

pians,  139-142. 

The  lamb  on.  Revelation,  238- 

MURRAIN,  The  plague  of,  Exodus, 

245- 

141-144. 

MOURNING  in   silence,   Leviticus, 

MUSIC,  and  praise  of  the  Temple, 

247-249. 

I.  Kings,  197. 

MOUSE,  The,  of  Sennacheribs  de- 

 and  worship,  James,  320-322. 

feat,  II.  Kings,  345. 

Influence  of,  I.  Samuel,  275. 

MOZLEY,  J.  B.,  Lectures,  Romans, 

of   the   Temple,    Psalms   III., 

189. 

460. 

MULBERRY  TREES,  II.  Samuel, 

Origin  suggested,  Genesis,  46. 

S2. 

Religious  value  of,  Chronicles, 

MULLER,    K.    0.,    Antiquities   of 

440-443- 

Antioch,  Acts  II.,  150. 

MUSSUS,  James,  383- 

MULLER,   Max,  Ecclesiastes,   59, 

MUSTERING  of  Israel,  Numbers, 

60. 

18. 

MURATORIAN  FRAGMENT,  The 

MYSTERIES,  Christian,  II.  Corin- 

Acts I.,  7;  James,  4. 

thians,  47-58. 

Canon,  Pastoral  Epistles,    6, 

New     Testament,    Colossians, 

14;  John  Epistles,  31,  35. 

1 26-1 31;  Thessalonians,  263; 

MURDER,     Accidental,     Exodus, 

Pastoral         Epistles,         132, 

343. 

135. 

228 


NAAMAN—NA  THAN 


N 


NAAMAN,   Leprosy  of,   Leviticus, 

329»  330. 

Story  of,  IL  Kings,  50-65. 

NABAL,    David    and,    L    Samuel, 

378-390;  Proverbs,  339. 
NABI,  or  prophet,  Numbers,  29. 
NABONIDAS,  Isaiah  IL,  65,  113, 

193. 

persecutes  the  Jews,  Ezra,  16. 

State  of,  Twelve  Prophets  IL, 

22. 

Terror  of,  Ezra,  Ti'S- 

NABOPOLASSAR,  II.  Kings,  383, 

422. 
NABOTH,  Ahab  and  the  vineyard 

of,  I.  Kings,  473-483- 
NADAB,  King  of  Israel,  I.  Kings, 

309»  310- 

NADAB,  Strange  fire  of,  Leviticus, 
237-255;  Numbers,  29. 

NAHASH,  King  of  the  Amorites, 
I.  Samuel,  170,  172. 

NASHON,  Numbers,  22. 

NAHUM,The  book,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets IL,  77-112. 

Text  of,  Twelve  Prophets  II. , 

82. 

NAHUM  I.,  3,  II.  Kings,  22. 

NAHUM  III.,  5,  Jeremiah  L,  296, 
298. 

8-1 1,  II.  Kings,  382. 

10,  IL  Kings,  142,  222. 

NAIOTH,    David    at,    I.    Samuel, 

313- 
NAMES,  Christian,  Chronicles,  39. 


NAMES,     foundation      of     hope, 

Psalms  II. ,  156. 
Jesus  the  allhallowing,  Colos- 

sians,  ZZ2'TiTy^. 
Significance  of,  Chronicles,  30- 

NAOMI,    and    Boaz,  Judges,   397 

sq. 

and  her  burden.  Judges,  368. 

and       her      daughters-in-law, 

Judges,  371. 
returns  to  Bethlehem,  Judges, 

387. 
NAPHTALI,     The     tribe,     Moses 

blesses,  Deuteronomy,  469. 
NAPOLEON,   at  Leipzig,  Exodus, 

157- 

compared    with    Sennacherib, 

Isaiah  I.,  362. 

leaves  Egypt,  Isaiah  I.,  353. 

on  the  conquests  of  Christ,   I. 

Samuel,  263. 

on  his  way  to  St.  Helena,  Num- 
bers, 285. 

retreat  from  Moscow,  I.  Cor- 
inthians, 237. 

the  supreme  example  of  failure, 

Judges,  149. 

NATHAN,  The  prophet,  and  David, 
Chronicles,  242;  Psalms  IL, 
496. 

and  the  rebellion  of  Adonijah, 

I  Kings,  82-85. 

rebukes  Davidj  II,  SamueU  169- 

180. 


NA  THA  N—NEHEMTA  H 


229 


NATHAN,  tells  David  not  to  build 
a  temple,  II.  Samuel,    loo. 

NATHAN,  son  of  David,  I.  Kings, 
142. 

NATHANIKLand  Jaiol)'s  dream, 
Genesis,  285. 

called,  John  I.,  64. 

NATIONALISM  of  the  old  cov- 
enant, Hebrews,  140-243. 

NATIONS, Duty  of,  Numbers,  160; 
Judges,  2>7- 

responsible  to  God,  Leviticus, 

128. 

NATIVITY,  The,  Luke,  62. 

NATURAL  RP:LIGI0N,  Job,  25; 
Hebrews,  3. 

ends  with  a  sigh,  Job,  290. 

Source  of.  Job,  178. 

NATURE,  and  God,  Numbers,  80; 
Job,  166,  287,  301;  Psalms 
II.,  253;  Jeremiah  I.,  235. 

and  the  supernatural,  Judges, 

266. 

as  a  revelation  of  God,  He- 
brews, 3. 

Cultus,  Numbers,  313;  Judges, 

42,  418. 

Destruction  of,  Isaiah  I.,  417, 

sq. 

Dissolution  of,  Hebrews,  307. 

Fourfold  use  by  the  prophets, 

Isaiah  I.,  16-18. 

in    the    Scripture,    Psalms    I., 

189. 

Influence  of.  Exodus,  2>^'j. 

interrogated,  Hebrews,  8. 

Love  of,  James,  86,  231. 

Redemption  of,  Isaiah  I.,  188- 

199. 

the  vesture  of  the  Son,  He- 
brews, 2T. 


NAZARETH,  Christ  and,  Luke,  51, 
61,  131. 

NAZI  RITE,  Samson  to  be  a. 
Judges,  276. 

vow,  Acts  II.,   T^T^jif,  436. 

NAZIRITISM,  ceremonies  of  dis- 
charge, Numbers,  64. 

Parellels  to.  Numbers,  59. 

Statutes  regarding.   Numbers, 

60. 

NEANDER,  Augustus,  James, 
290,  325- 

NEBUCHADNEZZAR,  11.  Kings, 
429,  435,  436;  Isaiah  II.,  32, 
34,  54,  107;  Ecclesiastes,  35, 
38;  Song  of  Solomon,  109; 
Jeremiah  I.,  25,  31,  46;  II., 
4,  5,  300;  Ezekiel,  loi,  160, 
242-245,  282;  Daniel,  45,  143. 

captures  Jeconiah,  Deuter- 
onomy, 349. 

Dream  of,  Daniel,  141 -166. 

Idol  of  gold,  Daniel,  167-183. 

stricken   and  restored,  Daniel, 

184-202. 

NEBUZARADAN,     Jeremiah     II., 

173,  175- 
NECESSITY,  Job,  130. 
NECTARIUS,  James,  340. 
NEGLECT,  and  its  results,  Judges, 

138. 

and  rejection.  Numbers,  186. 

of  God,  Deuteronomy,  155. 

NEHEMIAH,    The  patriot,  Ezra, 

163-350. 
and  the  covenant,  Ezra,  307- 

316. 

and  the  law,  Ezra,  271-290. 

midnight  ride,  Ezra,  198-209. 

on  guard,  Ezra,  234-246. 

Prayer  of,  Ezra,  174-197, 


230 


NEHEMIA  H—NICO  LAS 


NEHEMIAH,    rebuilds  Jerusalem, 

Ezra,  210-234. 

the  reformer,  Ezra,  339-350. 

NEHEMIAH,  The  book,  Ezra,  i- 

11;  Psalms  n.,  452. 

Exposition  of,  Ezra,  163-350. 

NEHEMIAH  I.,   5,  Deuteronomy, 

123. 
NEHEMIAH    II.,   2-8,   I.   Samuel, 

139- 

3,  Song  of  Solomon,  92. 

6,  Psalms,  65. 

NEHEMIAH  HI.,  16,  Acts  I.,  125. 

NEHEMIAH  IV.,  17,  Chronicles, 
225. 

NEHEMIAH  V.,  19,  Leviticus,  tt, 
Jeremiah  I.,  "j"]. 

NEHEMIAH  VII.,  63-65,  Chroni- 
cles, 47. 

NEHEMIAH  VIII.,  6,  Daniel,  226. 

10,  Revelation,  185. 

NEHEMIAH  IX.,  5,  Daniel,  151. 

26,  Jeremiah  I.,    102;  James, 

294. 

NEHEMIAH  X.,  32,  Chronicles, 
405;  Ezekiel,  443,  453. 

NEHEMIAH    XL,    i,    2,    Ezekiel, 

495- 

9,  Jeremiah  I.,  72. 

19,  Psalms  II.,  43. 

36,  Chronicles,  104. 

NEHEMIAH  XIIL,  5,  Ezekiel,  430. 

15,  Jeremiah  I.,  368. 

23,  Chronicles,  TJ. 

26,  Chronicles,  173. 

NEHUSHTAN,  II.  Kings,  293. 
NEIGHBOUR,    Relations    to  our. 

Proverbs,  244. 

Rights  of  our,  Leviticus,  164. 

Who    is    our?    Exodus,    315; 

Deuteronomy,  127,  145. 


NELSON,  Robert,  Fasts  and  Fes- 
tivals, Acts  I.,  79;  II.,  256. 

NELSON,  Lord,  I.  Corinthians, 
266. 

NEO-CAESAREA,  Acts  I.,  266. 

NEOCOROS,  Acts  II.,  379,  380. 

NEPHESH,  Numbers,  53. 

NERO,  Emperor,  Acts  II.,  433, 
47o;Ephesians,  283,  340;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  14,  89,  275, 
414,  419,  422,  426. 

NESTORIANISM,  Acts  L,  48;  IL, 
258;  Hebrews,  169. 

NEW  MOON,  Numbers,  343,  349. 

of  seventh    month.    Numbers, 

355- 
NEWTESTAMENT,  canon.  Acts  L, 

16. 
Puritanism,    II.    Corinthians, 

237-247. 
quotations    in    Isaiah,    Isaiah 

IL,  6,  282,  284. 
NEW  TESTAMENT  ETHICS,  The 

vow  in,  Leviticus,  549-552. 
NEWMAN,  J.  H.,  Isaiah  L,   267; 

Acts    I.,    381;   Pastoral  Epis- 
tles,   39,    40,    233-235,    z^T, 

Hebrews,  13;  James,  202,  266, 

380,  383,  443- 
NEWTON,  Sir  Isaac,  Daniel,  95. 
NEWTON,  Robert,  Acts,  I,  3. 
NICANOR,      Gate     of,    Acts      L, 

158. 
NICENE  CREED,  Hebrews,  29. 
NICEPHORUS,  James,  422. 
NICODEMUS,    John    I.,    99-116; 

Acts  L,  240. 
Gospel    of.    Pastoral  Epistles, 

380. 
NICOLAS,    proselyte    of  Antioch, 

Acts  L,  286. 


NINE  VEff— NUMBERS  X  V. 


231 


NINFA'EH,  Fall  of,  II.  Kings,  38  r ; 
Twelve  Prophets  II.,  17,  61- 
66,  96-112. 

Repentance  of.  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  529-535- 

NITZSCH,  Karl  Immamul,  Dan- 
iel, 8 1,  S3. 

NOAH,  Genesis,  63,  stj. 

As  were   the   days    of,    Peter, 

325-334- 

Covenant  with.  Genesis,  72,  y 2^. 

Drunkenness  of,  Genesis,  75. 

Faith  of,  Hebrews,  215. 

Fall  of,  Genesis,  68-80. 

Preaching  of,  Peter,  139. 

Sons  of.  Genesis,  78. 

NOB,   David  at,  I.   Samuel,    331- 

335- 
NON-RESISTANCE,    Doctrine    of, 

Chronicles,  378-392. 
NORTHCOTE,  J.  S.,  Epitaphs  of 

the  Catacombs,  Acts  I.,  112. 
NOVATIAN  HERESY,  Acts  I.,  237 ; 

Hebrews,  95. 
NOWACK,  Wilhelm  G.  H.,  Twelve 

Prophets    II.,    128,    144,   380, 

432,  436,  487. 
NUMBERS,  The  book,  as  history, 

Numbers,  13. 

Date  of.  Numbers,  12. 

like  Greek  Drama,  Numbers,  2. 

Puritanism  of.  Numbers,  8. 

Sources  of.  Numbers,  10. 

Spirit  of.  Numbers,  16. 

Three  main  channels  in.  Num- 
bers, 7. 

Time  covered  by.  Numbers,  1 1. 

NUMBERS  I.,  10,  Joshua,  22. 
NUMBERS  II..  18,  Joshua,  22. 

24,  Joshua,  23. 

NUMBERS  v.,  2,  3,  II.  Kings,  83. 


NUMBERS  v.,    12-27,      Ecviticus, 

156. 
NUMBERS    VI.,     2,    Jeremiah    II., 

46. 

912,  Leviticus,  350. 

10,  Leviticus,  319. 

24-26,  Psalms  II.,  266. 

25,  Psalms  I.,  298;  II.,  407. 

NUMBERS  VIL,  Leviticus,  210. 

89,  E.xodus,  2>77' 

NUMBERS  IX.,  5,  Joshua,  121. 

15-22,  I.  Samuel,  64. 

NUMBERS  X.,  35,  I.  Samuel,  64; 

Psalms  I.,   28;  II.,   2-jy,  III., 

350. 
NUMBERS  XL,  i,  11.  Kings,  18. 

3,  Psalms  II.,  391, 

4-6,    E.xodus,    234;   Leviticus, 

369;  Psalms  III.,  144. 

17,  John  I.,  48. 

TyT^-,  Psalms  III.,  144. 

NUMBERS XII.,  7,  Ephesians,  274. 

10,  11.  Kings,  63. 

II,  Jeremiah  L,  9. 

12,  Leviticus,  330. 

NUMBERS  XIIL,  16,  Matthew,  9. 

22,  II.  Samuel,  19. 

30,  Joshua,  264. 

2^2,  Ezekiel,  Til"^. 

33,  Joshua,  247. 

NUMBERS  XIV.,  10,  Joshua,  34. 

24,  Joshua,  264. 

28,  Psalms  III.,  147. 

29,  Joshua,  121. 

31,  Psalms  III.,  146. 

NUMBERS     XV.,    2-4,    Leviticus, 

105. 

30  32,  Ezekiel,  482. 

T^i,  Jeremiah  I.,  2ilZ- 

39,    Leviticus,    195;    Song   of 

Solomon,  44. 


232 


NUMBERS  XVI.—NYMPHAS 


NUMBERS  XVI.,  3,  Joshua,  3435 

NUMBERS     XXIV.,     19,    Psalms 

Psalms  III,,  144. 

III.,  187. 

22,  Hebrews,  284. 

20,  John  Epistles,  183. 

3i-33»  Joshua,  185. 

NUMBERS  XXV.,   9,  Psalms  III., 

35,  Psalms,  145. 

147. 

46,  Leviticus,  238. 

NUMBERS     XXVI.,     7,     18,    34, 

NUMBERS XVIII.,  i,  Joshua,  342. 

Joshua,  -JT,. 

2,  Joshua,  342. 

NUMBERS    XXVL,    2>?>,    Joshua, 

7,  Chronicles,  422, 

309- 

12,  Deuteronomy,  315. 

NUMBERS  XXVII.,  i-ii,  Joshua, 

14,  Deuteronomy,  170. 

309- 

• 15,    16,    Leviticus,    545;   Eze- 

17,  Psalms  II.,  426. 

kiel,  181. 

18-23,  Acts  I.,  284. 

19,  Chronicles,  327. 

NUMBERS  XXVIIL,   3-8,  Ezekiel, 

20,    24,    Deuteronomy,    314; 

473- 

Ephesians,  50. 

NUMBERS  XXXI.,   6,  Psalms  II., 

21,  Leviticus,  559. 

495- 

NUMBERS  XX.,  2-13,  Psalms  III., 

7,  II.  Kings,  TT,. 

148. 

8,  Joshua,  259. 

NUMBERS  XXL,   6,  Jeremiah  I., 

16,  Psalms  II.,  426. 

183. 

NUMBERS  XXXIIL,  47,  48,  Eze- 

 9,  II.  Kings,  291. 

kiel,  374. 

22,  Psalms  I.,  158. 

55,  II.  Corinthians,  352. 

29,  Jeremiah  I.,  306. 

NUMBERS  XXXV.,  5,  Joshua,  347. 

NUMBERS,  XXIL,  21,  Psalms  II., 

9-34,  Joshua,  326. 

495- 

24,  Numbers,  403. 

NUMBERS     XXIII.,      8,      James, 

31,    Exodus,    345;     Leviticus, 

181. 

115,  484. 

9,    Jeremiah    I.,    317;   Twelve 

2i2i->  Jeremiah  I.,  108. 

Prophets  L,  270. 

NUMBERS    XXXVI.,    11,  Joshua, 

10,  John  Epistles,  183. 

309. 

NUMBERS      XXIV.,     4,     Twelve 

NUMENIUS,      Pastoral     Epistles, 

Prophets  I.,  15. 

379. 

8,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  68. 

NUNC  DIMMITTIS,The,  Luke,  44- 

9,  Psalms  I.,  159. 

46. 

13,  Song  of  Solomon,  163. 

NYMPHAS,  Colossians,    403-406 

0.1  TH—OPPORr  UNITY 


233 


OATH,  of  God  to  Abraham,  He- 
brews,  lOI. 

of   men    and  God  contrasted, 

Hebrews,  104. 

OBADIAH    and  Elijah,   I.   Kings, 

379- 
OBADIAH,     The     book.    Twelve 

Prophets  H.,  161-184. 
OBADIAH,      4,       Jeremiah       II., 

244. 

5,  Jeremiah  I.,  42. 

8,  Ezekiel,  227. 

10-14,  Isaiah  I.,  439;  Jeremiah 

I-,  317- 

11-15,  Jeremiah  II.,  244. 

21,  Jeremiah  II.,  247. 

OBED  EDOM,  The  arkatthehouse 

of,  II,  Samuel,  89. 
OBEDIENCE,       Proverbs,      385; 

Luke,  168;  John  I.,  i84;Ephe- 

sians,       381;      Thessalonians, 

138. 

and  love,  Colossians,  487. 

Children  of,  Peter,  44. 

Duty  of.  Pastoral  Epistles,  2-]2, 

275- 
of  the  Son,  Hebrews,  yj  \  Peter, 

12,  13. 

Prompt,  Joshua,  142. 

Reward  of,  Job,  42. 

OBJECTIONS,  Christ's  method  of 

dealinj^  with,  Matthew,   159. 
OBLIGATION,    Consciousness   of, 

Philippians,  340. 
OBSCURITY  may  furnish  leaders. 

Judges,  87;  I.  Samuel,  ^2. 


OCCULT  PHENOMENA,  Genesis, 

363. 

OECUMENICUS,  Acts  II.,  84; 
James,  285,  399,  418. 

OEHLER,  G.  F.,  Acts  II.,  6. 

OFFENCES,  Christ's  doctrine  of, 
Mark,  254-262. 

OFFERINGS,  See  burnt  offerings, 
meal  offerings,  sin  offerings, 
wave  offerings,  sacrifices. 

OG,  King  of  Bashan,  Joshua,  12. 

OHOLA  and  OHOLIBAH,  Alle- 
gory of  Ezekiel,  Ezekiel,  189- 
196. 

OIL,  for  the  sacrifice,  Leviticus, 
68-71. 

for  the  sick,  James,  327,  331, 

OLD  TESTAMENT  defective  in 
unity,  Hebrews,  6. 

OLIVE,  Imagery,  Romans,  2)^2)- 

OMISSIONS,  Numbers,  184. 

OMRI,  King  of  Israel,  I.  Kings, 
338-343- 

ONESIMUS,  Colossians,  2>^2-i'8>'S, 
418,  454-468,  471,  483;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  41 1. 

ONESIPHORUS,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 313,  319,  320,  323, 
414. 

OOSTERZEE,  J.  J.  von,  Hebrews, 

OPPORTUNISM,  Judges,  166. 
OPPORTUNITY,  Colossians,  365. 

for  winning  men,  Peter,  79. 

Providence  of  God  and,  I.Sam 

ucl,  316. 


234 


OP  TIMISM—0  VERCRO  WDING 


OPTIMISM  of  Caleb  and  Joshua, 

Numbers,  i6o. 
ORDEAL  of  jealousy,  Numbers,  57. 
ORDINANCES,  No  healing  in,  John 

I.,  180. 
ORDINATION,  Acts  II.,  194,  414; 

Pastoral  Epistles,  60,  63,  220, 

314- 

ORELLI,  C,  von,  Jeremiah  II.,  30, 
2,7^  43>  196,  204,  214,  225, 
2455  285,  338;  Daniel,  ^y, 
Twelve  Prophets  II.,  117,  127, 
287,  451- 

ORGANIZATION,  Idea  of,  Num- 
bers,  44;  Deuteronomy,  328. 

ORIENTAL  SOCIETY,  Character, 
Job,  131. 

Contrasts  of.  Job,  72. 

Ideas  of,  Job,  50. 

ORIGEN,  Song  of  Solomon,  43; 


Acts  I.,  79,  loi,  400;  II.,  251 ; 
Ephesians,  18;  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 125,  228,  229,  379; 
James,  5,  21,  307,  330,  ^17, 
369,  2)7^^  441;  Peter,  vi. 

ORIGIN  OF  THE  WORLD,  See 
CREATION. 

ORMAZD,  Ecclesiastes,  57-62. 

ORNAMENTS,    Rubric,    Acts    II., 

239- 
ORONTES,  Acts  II.,  151,  196. 
ORPAH  and  Naomi,  Judges,  376. 
ORTHODOXY    uncorrupted,   Job, 

197. 
OTHNIEL,  Judges,  22,  yy  74. 
OTTO,     Karl,      Corp.     Apologet, 

Acts  II.,  X. 
OUTCOME,  The,  Bitterness  of  the 

latter  end,  II.  Samuel,  35-37. 
OVERCROWDING,  Numbers,  2,1-^- 


PAES— PARABLES  OF  CHRIST 


235 


PAES,  James,  105. 
PAIN,  and  evil.  Job,  52. 

and  imprudence,  Job,  59. 

Happiness  and,  Job,  55. 

Mystery  of,  Job,  120. 

PALP:STINK,  in  the  time  of  Abra- 
ham, Genesis,  96,  sq. 
Jehovah's  land,   Ezekiel,   2i^2- 

341- 

the  promised  land,  Joshua,  52. 

PALEY,    WiHiam,    Acts    II.,   291, 

360; I.  Corinthians,  352;  John 

Epistles,  181,  182. 

on  Divine  goodness.  Job,  53. 

PALGRAVE,  W.  G.,  quoted,  Job, 

20,  197. 
PALLADIUS,  Peter,  xiii. 
PALMER,  William,  Acts  I.,  22,-!. 
PAMPHILIUS,  James,  6,  7- 
PANGAEUS,  Mount,  Acts  II.,  276. 
PANTAENUS,  Acts  I.,  400. 
PAPAL,    infallibility,     Acts     IL, 

230. 
Rise   of,  supremacy,  Acts  II. , 

144. 
PAPHOS,  Acts  IL,  197,  201. 
PAPIAS,  Acts  L,  80;  Peter,  v. 
PARABLE,  of  Nathan,  IL  Samuel, 

Use    of    the    word,     Hebrews, 

228. 
PARABLES,  of  Balaam,  Numbers, 

292,  300,  305. 

of  the  vine.  Psalms  IL,  409. 

of  the  vineyard,  Isaiah  L,  2^9^- 

47. 


PARABLES  OF  CHRIST,  Mat- 
thew, 173-185;  Mark,  105- 
129. 

The  corn   of  wheat,   John   IL, 

29-43- 
The  final  separation,  Matthew, 

366-375. 
The    Good    Samaritan,    Luke, 

294-305- 
The   good  shepherd,  John  L, 

319-334- 
The  hid     treasure,     Matthew, 

184. 
The    husbandman,    Matthew, 

311-314;       Mark,       318-325; 

John  L,  26. 
The   lamp    and    stand,   Mark, 

118-121. 
The  marriage  feast,  Matthew, 

315-322. 
The   mustard    seed,  Matthew, 

183;  Mark,  126-129. 

The  net,  Matthew,  184. 

of  judgment,    Matthew,    349- 

375- 
of  the  lost  and  found,   Luke, 

317-335- 

Principle  of  parabolic  instruc- 
tion, Matthew,  175-181  ;Mark, 
105-109. 

The  prodigal  son,  Luke,  322- 

335- 
Rich  man  and  Lazarus,  Luke, 

359- 

The     seed     growing    secretly, 

Mark,  121-125. 


236 


PARABLES  OF  CHRIST— PATRIOTISM 


PARABLES    OF    CHRIST,    The 

servant    and    the     household, 

Matthew,  349-352. 
The  sower,  Matthew,  176-178, 

181-183;       Mark,       109-118; 

Luke,  225-240. 
The    talents,    Matthew,    357- 

365. 

The  two  sons,  Matthew,  310. 

The  unjust  judge,   Luke,  187, 

188. 
The    vine    and    the   branches, 

John  IL,  173-190. 
The    virgins,    Matthew,    353- 

357- 

PARDON  and  restoration,  Num- 
bers, 171. 

PARENTS,  Disobedience  to,  IL 
Samuel,  275. 

duty    to    children,    Leviticus, 

Z26;  Deuteronomy,  84;  Prov- 
erbs,     303-313;     Colossians, 

340-345- 

honoured,  Exodus,  312. 

PARTY  Shibboleths,  Judges,  262. 
PASSOVER,  The,  Numbers,  351; 

Hebrews,  320. 
celebrated     at     the     Jordan, 

Joshua,  121-122. 
celebrated  by  Hezekiah,Chron- 

icles,  434-438- 
Christ   keeps,    Matthew,    386- 

395- 

Feast  of,  Leviticus,  455-458. 

instituted.  Exodus,  1 71-193. 

Little,  Numbers,  84,  86. 

PASTORAL  EPISTLES,  Authen- 
ticity of  the,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 4-16,  2>2i^  52,  55,  163, 
169,  294,  295,  312,  322,404, 
406-417. 


PASTORAL  EPISTLES,  Changes 
made  by  revisers.  Pastoral 
Epistles,  Ti2,  47,  59,  219,  268, 
269,  285,  354,  371,  391- 

Character     of    the.     Pastoral 

Epistles,    3,    4,    15,    16,    201, 

309,  313- 

Doctrinal  statement  of  the.  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  259,  282. 

Genuineness  of.  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 4-16,  2>Z,  52,  55,  163, 
169,  294,  295,  312,  322,404, 
406,  417,  421. 

Phraseology  of  the.  Pastoral 

Epistles,  3,  4,  15,  16,  201, 
309,  312. 

PATARA,  Paul  at.  Acts  IL,  424. 

PATIENCE,  Greek  words  for, 
James,  291. 

in  criticism,  James,  299. 

in  waiting,  James,  289-295. 

of  faith,  Isaiah  I.,  165. 

of        hope,         Thessalonians, 

30-33- 

of  Isaac,  Genesis,  242. 

of  Job,  James,  295-301. 

of  Joshua,  Joshua,  29. 

Trust  and.  Psalms  I.,  361. 

Value  of,  Joshua,  156. 

PATMOS,  John  at,  John  Epistles, 

ii.;   Revelation,  11. 
PATON,    John    G.,    Anecdote   of, 

Proverbs,  215. 

Early  life  of,  Proverbs,  54. 

PATRICK,   St.,    Confessions,  Acts 

I.,  12. 

Family  of,  Acts  I.,  281. 

PATRIOTISM  of  Isaiah,  Isaiah  I., 

of  Nehemiah,  Ezra,  172. 

True,  Ezra,  212,  213. 


PA  TRIOTISM—PA  UL 


237 


PATRIOTISM,  A    wrong  kind  of. 

PAUL,    Apologia   pro    vita    sua, 

Numbers,  319. 

Thessalonians,  69  82, 

PATTISON,  Mark,  James,  208. 

appeals    to   lofty   motives,   II. 

PAUL,    St.,    Abraham's    blessing. 

Corinthians,  382. 

Galatians,  180-188. 

as  a  sower,  Mark,  115,  116. 

Absence  and  longing  of,  Thes- 

asks  for  prayer,  Romans,  416- 

salonians,  99-116. 

420. 

Acts  of,  Acts  I.,  2. 

at  Caesarca,  Acts  II.,  422-449. 

Anathema   of,    Galatians,   34- 

at  Corinth,  Acts  II.,  301-330; 

49. 

Romans,  5;  I.  Corinthians,  3, 

and  church  organization,  Acts 

sq. 

II.,  216. 

at  Ephesus,  Acts  II.,  331-384- 

and  circumcision,  Acts  II.,  225- 

at  Jerusalem,  Galatians,    ^y 

228,  392,  435- 

90. 

and  the  curse  of  the  law,  Gala- 

 at  Malta,  Acts  II.,  450-471. 

tians,  188-195. 

at  Miletus,  Acts  II.,  405-421. 

and  false  brethren,  Galatians, 

at  Patara,  Acts  II.,  424. 

98-112. 

at  Puteoli,  Acts  II.,  465. 

and  the  epistle  to  the  Romans, 

at  Sidon,  Acts  II.,  461. 

Romans,  10. 

at  Thessalonica,  Acts  I.,  2^y. 

and  the  Galatians  folly,  Gala- 

 at  Troas,  Acts  II.,   268,   392- 

tians,  163-179. 

406. 

and       Gnosticism,       Pastoral 

at  Tyre,  Acts  II.,  425. 

Epistles,  32-51. 

Authentic  writings  of,  Thessa- 

 and  Peter,  Galatians,  93. 

lonians,  395-399- 

and    Peter,   James  and  John, 

Author    of    Ephesians,    Gala- 

Galatians, 1 13-128. 

tians,  4-13. 

and  the  poor,  I.  Corinthians, 

The    bane    and    the    antidote, 

387-399- 

Colossians,  185-198. 

and  the  primitive  church,  Gala- 

 Baptism  of.  Acts  II.,  72-77. 

tians,  83-97. 

Behaviour    in    Christian    wor- 

 and  the  Roman  see,   .\cts   II., 

ship.     Pastoral    Epistles,    94- 

246. 

103. 

and    the    Sanhedrin,   .\cts   II., 

belief  in  the  resurrection  and 

23,  429,  442. 

the       incarnation.       Pastoral 

and    slavery,     Pastoral     I'.pis 

Epistles,  353-363- 

ties,   175  « 87- 

thebestowment  of  grace,  Ephe- 

 and  Timothy,    Pastoral    Kjjis- 

sians,  34-49. 

tles,  19-31- 

Birthplace  of.  Acts  II.,  4. 

and  Christian  literature,  Pas- 

 Bodily  exercise  and  Godliness, 

toral  Epistles,  224-236. 

PubLural  Epibtlcs,  141-150. 

238 


PA  UL—PA  UL 


PAUL,  The  brand  of  Jesus,  Gala- 

tians,  448-459. 
■ Burden-bearing,         Galatians, 

390-404. 
Charge    against    controversy, 

Pastoral         Epistles,        364- 

368. 
Charity      and      independence, 

Thessalonians,  1 51-168. 
Children  of  the  light,  Ephesians, 

321-335- 

Choice  between  living  and  dy- 
ing, Phihppians,  65-76. 

Christ  and  the  church,  Ephe- 
sians, 366-379. 

The  Christian  family,  Colossi- 

ans,  335-353. 

The  Christian  hope,  II.  Corin- 
thians, 173-185. 

The  Christian  household,Ephe- 

sians,  380-393. 

The    Christian    life,    Pastoral 

Epistles,  343-352. 

Christian    life    a   race,   Philip- 

pians,  259-280. 

The  Christian  ministry,  Colos- 

sians,  132-150. 

Christian  mysteries,  II.  Corin- 
thians, 47-58. 

Christian     worth    of    labour, 

Thessalonians,  375-390. 

Christians,   living  epistles,   II. 

Corinthians,  99-1 11. 

Christ's  captive,  II.  Corin- 
thians, 84-98. 

Christ's  spirit  and  human  flesh, 

Galatians,  347-360. 

Church  discipline,  II.  Corin- 
thians, 72-83. 

The  church  in  Crete,  Pastoral 

Epistles,  212-223. 


PAUL,  The  church's  one  founda- 
tion, II.  Corinthians,  35-46. 

Commission        of,       Romans, 

411. 

Comprehension       of      Christ, 

Ephesians,  183-196. 

Concerning    spiritual    gifts,   I. 

Corinthians,  273-291. 

Conclusion       of      Colossians, 

Colossians,  371-416. 

Conduct    and  the  mystery  of 

Godliness,  Pastoral  Epistles, 
141-150. 

Conversion  of,  Acts  II.,  22-47; 

Galatians,  53-82;  Philippians, 
188-190;  Thessalonians,  53- 
68. 

The  covenant  of  promise,  Gala- 
tians, 196-210. 

The  cross  the   death    of  law, 

Colossians,  213-225. 

The  Day  of  the  Lord,  Thessa- 
lonians, 185-200. 

The   dead    in    Christ,  Thessa- 
lonians, 169-184. 

Design  of  the  law,  Galatians, 

211-226. 

Discarded     vices,     Ephesians, 

290-304. 

dispute    at  Antioch,   Acts  II., 

247. 

Divine    commission    of,    Gala- 
tians, 68-82. 

The  divine  panoply,  Ephesians, 

410-424. 

Doctrine  and,  Ephesians,  305- 

320. 

Double     reconciliation,    Ephe- 
sians, 131-142. 

Duty  of  obedience  to  authority, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  270-281. 


PA  UL—PA  UL 


239 


PAUL,     Earth    teaching    heaven, 
Ephesians,  167-179. 

Effects  of  the  peace,  word  and 

name    of    Christ,    Colossians, 
320-3J4. 

Elements  of  worship,  Pastoral 

Epistles,  82-93. 

Enemies    of  the  cross,   Philip- 

pians,  281-298. 

Entreaty    of,    Galatians,   2-j2- 

285. 
Epistle   to    Philemon,    Colos- 
sians, 415-493. 

Epistle     to     Titus,     Pastoral 

Epistles,  199-306. 
The    eternal    purpose,    Ephe- 
sians, 21-33. 

• Exegesis  of.  Acts  II.,    18,    19, 

207. 
Faith  born  of  despair,  II.  Cor- 
inthians, 23-34. 
False  and  true  glorying,  Gala- 
tians, 421-434. 

Family  of,  Acts  II.,  7. 

The  far  and  near,  Ephesians, 

120-130. 

The  Father's  gift  through  the 

Son,  Colossians,  54-69. 

Final    redemption,   Ephesians, 

50-64. 

Foes  of  the  church,  Ephesians, 

397-409- 

For    the   eyes    of    the    heart, 

Ephesians,  65-78. 

forsaken  by  men  but  strong  in 

the    Lord,    Pastoral    Epistles, 
418-430. 

From  death  to  life,  Ephesians, 

95-108. 
The  fruit  of  the  spirit,  Gala- 
tians, 375  389- 


PAUL,   Fruits     of    liberality,    II. 
Corinthians,  274-288. 

Gain    of,    alone   of  Godliness, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  1 88-1 98. 

The  garments  of  the  renewed 

soul,  Colossians,  305-319. 

Gifts      and    sacrifices,     Philip- 

pians,  353-368. 
The  glory  of  the  Son,  Colos- 
sians, 70-84. 

God's     temple    in    humanity, 

Ephesians,  143-154. 
The  Gospel  defined,  II.  Corin- 
thians, 144-156. 

Gospel  of,  Galatians,  53-67. 

Grace  of  liberality,  II.  Corin- 
thians, 262-273. 
——The    great    test    of  sincerity, 
Pastoral  Epistles,  397-405. 

Greetings  in  the  epistle  to  the 

Romans,  Romans,  427. 
Growth    of  the  church,   Ephe- 
sians, 244-258. 
The  heir's  coming  of  age,  Gala- 
tians, 242-265. 

Heresy  in  the  New  Testament, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  294-306. 

Hinderers        and        troublers, 

Galatians,  316-329. 

his  account  of  faith,  Hebrews, 

201. 
Hope  as  a  motive  power,  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  259-269. 

How    the    Philippians    should 

think   about,   Philippians,  45- 
64. 

Impeachment  of  the  Jews,  Thes- 

salonians,  83-98. 

Imprisonment      of.      Pastoral 

Epistles,       13,     24,     28,    362, 
401. 


240                                      PA  UL- 

-PAUL 

PAULjin  Antioch-Pisidia,  Acts  II., 

PAUL,       Moral        condition       of 

206-210;  Galatians,  129-162. 

Slaves,  Pastoral  Epistles,  248- 

in      Antioch-Syria,     Acts     II., 

258. 

157- 

Mutual    intercession,    Thessa- 

 in    Arabia,    Acts    II.,    77-91; 

lonians,  359-374- 

Galatians,  78-82. 

■ The  new  nature  andnew  life, 

in  Athens,  Acts  II.,  305-321. 

Colossians,  290-304. 

in  Galatia,  Acts  II.,  263. 

New     Testament    Puritanism, 

in    Macedonia,    Acts  II.,   271- 

II.  Corinthians,  237-247. 

300. 

New  wine  of  the  spirit,   Ephe- 

 Itinerancy    of,    Romans,    412- 

sians,  336-350. 

415- 

The  new  world,  II.  Corinthians, 

Jannes  and  Jambres  and  errors, 

198-209. 

Pastoral  Epistles,  375-384. 

No  confidence  in  the  flesh,  Phil- 

 Joy    in    sufifering,    Colossians, 

ippians,  170-198. 

116-131. 

Not  yours  but  you,  II.  Corin- 

 Knowing       the      unknowable. 

thians,  359-371- 

Ephesians,  197-209. 

on    the    atonement,    Hebrews, 

Knowledge    of   Christ,   Philip- 

224. 

pians,  199-216. 

on    Christian    morals,     Ephe- 

 Language  of.  Acts  II.,  9. 

sians,  259-351. 

Liberalism  of,  Ezra,  70. 

on  church  life,  Ephesians,  211- 

The  Lord's  compassion  to.  Pas- 

258. 

toral  Epistles,  52-61. 

■ on     comparisons,    II.     Corin- 

 Love  and  prayers,  Thessaloni- 

thians,  300-311. 

ans,  117-134- 

on  family  life,  Ephesians,  351- 

Machinery     of    the    primitive 

393- 

church.  Pastoral  Epistles,  331- 

on  foolish  boasting,  II.  Corin- 

342. 

thians,  325-341. 

The  man  of  sin,  Thessalonians, 

on  the  gift  of  love,   I.  Corin- 

305-322. 

thians,  293-308. 

Manner  of,  Hebrews,  29. 

on  Godly  jealousy,   II.  Corin- 

 Martyrdom  of,  Acts  II.,  246. 

thians,  312-324. 

The  measure  of  Christ's  love. 

on  going  to  law,  I.  Corinthians, 

II.  Corinthians,  186-197. 

129-144. 

Measure  of  the  gift  of  Christ, 

on  liberty  and  love,   I.   Corin- 

Ephesians, 227-243. 

thians,  177-193. 

mind    about    the    Philippians, 

on    marriage,    I.   Corinthians, 

Phihppians,  19-44- 

161-176. 

The  mind  of  Christ,  Philippians, 

on  the  ministry,  I.  Corinthians, 

95-130. 

97-112. 

PA  UL—PA  UL 


241 


PAUL,  on  ordination,  Acts  II., 
188-218. 

on  the  resurrection,  I.  Corin- 
thians, 325-386. 

on    spiritual    gifts   and   public 

worshii^,   I.   Corinthians,   309- 

3^4- 

on  the  support  of  the  ministry, 

I.  Corinthians,  195-209. 

on  the  use  of  the  veil,  I.  Corin- 
thians, 241-257. 

on  war,   II.  Corinthians,  289- 

299. 

Origin  of  the  Christian  min- 
istry. Pastoral  Epistles,  104- 
117. 

Our  city  and  our  coming  king, 

Philippians,  299-316. 

The  pastor  and  women.  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  1 51-163. 

a    pastor's    heart,    II.    Corin 

thians,  59-71. 

Peace    and    joy,     Philippians, 

The  perils  of  liberty,  Galatians, 

333-346. 
Perils  of  redemption.  Pastoral 

Epistles,  385-396- 
Personal      details.      Pastoral 

Epistles,  406-417. 
Personal    histor\-,    Galatians, 

53-164- 
Personal    purity,    Thessaloni- 

ans,  135-150. 
Personality  of  Satan,  Pastoral 

Epistles,  77-81. 

Portrait  of.  Acts  II.,  51. 

Prayer     for     the    Colossians, 

Colossians,  38-53. 
Precepts  for  the  innermost  life, 

Colossians,  354-370- 


PAUL,  The  present  Christian  life  a 
risen  life,  Colossians,  257-270. 
Prophecies  on  Timothy,   Pas- 
toral Epistles,  62-71. 

^^Punishment     of    Hymenaeus, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  72-75. 

Purpose       of     reconciliation, 

Colossians,  100-115. 

quarrel  with  Barnabas,  Acts  II., 

248-251. 

Reconciliation, II.  Corinthians, 

210-223. 
The    reconciling    Son,    Colos- 
sians, 85-99. 
Regeneration,    Pastoral    Epis- 
tles, 282-293. 
Repentance  unto  life,  II.  Corin- 
thians, 248-261. 
The  responsibilities  of  the  pas- 
tor,   Pastoral    Epistles,     164- 
174. 

Restraint     and    its    removal, 

Thessalonians,  323-340. 

Results  of  the  coming  of  faith, 

Galatians,  227-241. 

Results    of  the  imprisonment, 

Philippians,  47. 
Resurrection  life  and  daily  dy- 
ing, Philippians,  2t,-j-2s9,. 

Return  to  bondage,  Galatians, 

257-271. 
Righteousness  of  faith,  Philip- 
pians, 217-236. 
Ritual    and    character,    Gala- 
tians, 435  447- 
Rulers  and  ruled,  Thessaloni- 
ans, 201-216. 

Saved  for  an   end,  Ephesians, 

.109-1 19. 

Second      marriage,      Pastoral 

Epistles,  118-129. 


242                                PA  UL—PA  USANIUS 

PAUL,  Second    Roman  imprison- 

PAUL,  The  things  to    fix    upon, 

ment  of,  Pastoral  Epistles,  13, 

28,  362,  401. 
Second     epistle    to    Timothy, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  307-430. 
Second  tour  of,  Acts  II.,   245- 

470. 
Secret   of  the  ages,  Ephesians, 

Philippians,  2)2>7-2i5^' 
thorn  in  the  flesh.  Acts  II.,  49, 

296. 

Trade  of.  Acts  II.,  10,  348. 

The    transfiguring    spirit,    II. 

Corinthians,  127-143. 
The  true  circumcision,   Colos- 

155-166. 
Shall  the  Galatians  be  circum- 

sians, 199-212, 
Transition  to  Polemics,  Colos- 

cised? Galatians,  302-315. 

sians,  168-184. 

The  signs  of   an    apostle,    II. 

The  two  covenants,  II.  Corin- 

Corinthians, 224-236. 
Signs      of     election,      Thessa- 

thians,  1 12-126. 
Two  final  tests  of  false  teach- 

lonians, 37-52. 
Slaying  self,   Colossians,   271- 

ing,  Colossians,  242-256. 
Two  human  types,  Ephesians, 

289. 
Sobermindedness,         Pastoral 

275-289. 
Undaunted  and  united  stead- 

Epistles, 237-247. 

Sowing  and  reaping,Galatians, 

405-418. 

fastness,   Philippians,  77-94- 
Use  of  the    race    course   illus- 
trated,   I.    Corinthians,    211- 

Speech    at    Apostolic  Council, 

Acts  II.,  241. 

226. 
The  victory  of  faith,  II.  Corin- 

 The  spirit,  Thessalonians,  233- 

250. 
Standing  orders  of  the  Gospel, 

Thessalonians,  217-232. 

thians,  157-172. 
voyage    to    Rome,    Acts    II., 

450-471- 
warnings    against    some    chief 

Story    of    Hagar,    Galatians, 

286-301. 

errors,  Colossians,  226-241. 
What     God    wrought    in    the 

Strength     and    weakness,     II. 

Corinthians,  342-258. 

Christ,  Ephesians,  81-94. 
Working    and  shining,   Philip- 

 striving    for    the    Colossians, 

Colossians,  1 51-167. 

pians,  131-156. 
Works  of  the  flesh,  Galatians, 

Suffering    and  consolation   of, 

II.  Corinthians,  10-22. 

361-374- 
PAUL  III.,   Pope,   Pastoral  Epis- 

 Suffering    and    glory,    Thessa- 
lonians, 289-304. 

tles,  50. 
PAULINUS   OF  NOLA,  Acts  II., 

. The  Thanksgiving,  Thessaloni- 
ans, 21-36. 

Theology     of,    Thessalonians, 

341-358. 

369- 
PAUPERISM,  Proverbs,  290. 
PAUSANIUS,  Acts  II.,  305,  3o8, 

2>^2,  363,  Z^S' 

PEA  CE—PERSONALIT  Y 


243 


PEACE,  and  grace,  Ephcsians, 
435  ;  Philippians,  15,  i6;Colos- 
sians,  17-20;  Thcssaloniaiis, 
15-17,  278,  279. 

and  joy,  Philippians,  2,\T-i:s(^- 

The  bequest  of,  John  II.,  157- 

171. 

Divine,  Numbers,  70. 

for  the  justified,  Romans,  128- 

138,  140. 

a  fruit  of  the  spirit,  Galatians, 

383- 
The  God  of,  Thessalonians,  251, 

252. 
has     brief     annals,      Joshua, 

247. 

Meaning  of,  Romans,  22, 

of     Christ,    Colossians,    321- 

325;  Thessalonians,  391-394. 
PEACE  OFFERING,  E.xodus,4i4; 

Leviticus,  82-108. 
PEDANIUS  SECUNDUS,  Pastoral 

Epistles,  179. 
PEKAH,  King  of  Israel,  II.  Kings, 

227-234;  Isaiah  I.,  103. 
PEKAHIAH,    King  of  Israel,   II. 

Kings,  226,  227. 
PELAGIUS,  James,  307. 
PENAL    SANCTIONS,    Leviticus. 

418-431- 
PENIEL,   Jacob  at.  Genesis,  293- 

306;  E.xodus,  7. 
PENINNAH,  I.  Samuel,  3,  7-9. 
PENTATEUCH,   Ezekiel  and  the, 

Ezekiel,  396-403. 
Testimony    of   Christ    to   the, 

Leviticus,  9. 
PENTECOST,   and  the  Christian 

church,  Ezra,  10. 
The  blessing  of,  Acts    I.,    82- 

106. 


PENTECOST,  Feast  of  the,  Levit- 
icus,  459460;  Numbers,  354. 

P'irst  fruits  of,   Acts    I.,    127- 

147. 

PENUEL  and  Gideon,  Judges,  190. 

PEOPLE,  The,  ultimately  respon- 
sible, Isaiah  I.,  119,  198,  224. 

PEOR,  Numbers,  305. 

PERAEA,  Last  days  of  Christ  in, 
Matthew,  267-285. 

PERATH,  The  river,  Jeremiah  I., 
289. 

PEREGRINUS  PROTEUS,  Acts  L, 
278. 

PERFECTION,  Christian,  Philip- 
pians, 270. 

PERGA,  Acts  II.,  197,  201,  364. 

PERGAMUM,  Church  at.  Revela- 
tion, 49-52. 

PERJURY,  Matthew,  75. 

PEROWNE,  J.  J.  S.,  Psalms  II., 
420;  III.,  16,  29,  31,  233,  240, 
319.  172,  421,  457;  Ecclesias- 
tes,  14,  113,  134- 

PERSECUTION  OF  THE 
CHURCH,  Pastoral  Epistles, 
54,  275. 

The  first.  Acts  I.,  173-192;  II., 

192. 

PERSIANS,  Israel  under  the. 
Twelve  Prophets  II.,  187-197. 

PERSEVERANCE,  Joshua,  190. 

of  spiritual    enemies,    Judges, 

316. 

PERSONAL     RIGHTS,     Exodus, 

339345- 

PERSONALITY,  l)ehind  phe- 
nomena, Romans,  43. 

—^-Greatness  of  Christ's,  He- 
brews, 120. 

Importance  of,  in  Job,  Job,  12. 


244 


PERSONALITY— PETER,  ST.,    TEACHING 


PERSONALITY,  of  God,  Hebrews, 

208. 
PERSONS,     Worldly    respect    of, 

James,  1 19-123. 
PESHITTO   VERSION,    Pastoral 

Epistles,    6;    James,    21,    30, 

368. 
PESSIMISM,  Judges,  230;  Job,  39 ; 

Ecclesiastes,  34. 
PETER,  St.,  Acts  of,  Acts  I.,  2. 
and    Christ    at    Galilee,    John 

II.,  387. 
and    Simon    Magus,    Acts    I., 

357,  384-397- 

and  the  washing  of  feet,  John 

II.,  ?,2. 

at   Antioch,    Galatians,     129- 

162. 

at  Lydda,  Acts  I.,  322-345. 

at  the  tomb  of  Christ,   John 

11.,  352. 

at  the  transfiguration,  Mat- 
thew, 238. 

attempts    to    walk    upon    the 

water,  Matthew,  199-201. 

Call  of,   Luke,    173;   John    I., 

62-64. 

Character  of,   Mark,  81;  Acts 

L,  71. 

Death  of  John  and,  John  Epis- 
tles, 10. 

Declaration  of,  John   I.,   227- 

Denial  by,  Matthew,  410-412; 

Luke,  384-387;  John  II.,  279- 

293- 

Fall  of,  Mark,  413-417. 

First  miracle  of.  Acts  I.,    148- 

172. 
First  sermon  of,  Acts  I.,    107- 

126. 


PETER,     in    Gethsemane,    Luke, 

3,73- 

in  prison.  Acts  II.,  174-182. 

on  Baptism,  Acts  II.,  140. 

on   the  resurrection.  Acts  II., 

133- 
Party  of  in  Corinth,  Romans, 

35- 

Paul  and,  Galatians,  93,  126. 

Prophecy  relating  to,  John  II., 

413-418. 
reproved,    Matthew,   228-230; 

Mark,     221-227;     Luke,     219- 

223. 
Restoration  of,  John  II.,  397- 

410. 
the  rock,  Matthew,  224;  Luke, 

157- 
Sermon  at  Caesarea,  Acts  II., 

131-141. 

the  spokesman,  Acts  I.,  71-75. 

vision  at  Joppa,  Acts  II.,  115- 

141. 

Warning  to,  Mark,  383-388. 

Writings  of  James  and,  James, 

59.  60,  85,  217,  256,  353. 
PETER,    ST.,   TEACHING,    Alto- 
gether    become     abominable, 

Peter,  313-324- 
As    were   the    days    of    Noah, 

Peter,  325-334- 
Be    ye    steadfast,    unmovable, 

Peter,  365-374. 
The  believers  double  joy,  Peter, 

177-188. 
Bless   and  blessed,  Peter,  119- 

132. 
By  their  fruits  ye  shall  know 

them,  Peter,  297-312, 
Christian  brotherhood,  Peter, 

55-68. 


PETER— I.  PETER  II. 


245 


PETER,   Christian   sorviiv,  PrUr, 

95-106. 
Christian     service    for    dod's 

glory,  Peter,   163  176. 
Christian  wives  and  hiisliaiids, 

Peter,  107-118. 
Christians  as  pilgrims,  Peter, 

83-94. 
The  Christian  ideal,  Peter,  41- 

54. 
Clothed   with   humility,  Peter. 

213-222. 
The       heavenly       inheritance, 

Peter,  17-28. 
How  to  tend  the  flock,   Peter, 

201-212. 
Judgment  to  come,  Peter,  335- 

344- 
The  lamp  shining  in    a    dark 

place,  Peter,  271-282. 
Lessons  of  suffering,  Peter,  149- 

162. 
The  Lord  is  not  slack,   Peter, 

345-354- 
The      Lord       knoweth       how 

to       deliver,        Peter,        2^y 

296. 
Plan  of  Redemption,  Peter,  29- 

40. 
Priesthood  of  believers,  Peter, 

69-82. 
Rewards    of  suffering  for  well 

doing,  Peter,  133-148. 
The  righteous  have  judgment 

here,  Peter,  189-200. 
The  saving  knowledge  of  God, 

Peter,  235-244. 
Through     perils     to    victory, 

Peter,  223-234. 
The  Trinity  and  man's  salva- 
tion, Peter,  3  16. 


PETER,  The  voice  in  the  Holy 
Mount,  Peter,  257-270. 

What  manner  of  person  ought 

ye  to  be?  Peter,  355-364. 

Who  shall  ascend  into  the-  hill 

of  the  Lord?  Peter,  245-256. 

PETER,  St.,  Epistle  of,  Introduc- 
tion, Peter,  v-xix. 

L  PETER  L,  2,  Leviticus,  142; 
Romans,  237,  267. 

3,  4,  John  Epistles,  248. 

4,    5,    Leviticus,    514;    Ephe- 

sians,  160. 

5,   Romans,  269;  James,  279. 

6,  Revelation,  49. 

6,  7,  James,  59,  65;  Revela- 
tion, 49. 

7,  13,  Galatians,  57. 

8,  Revelation,  102,  371, 

9,  22,  John  Epistles,  309. 

10-12,  Leviticus,  24;  Jeremiah 

H.,  257;  Daniel,  102. 

II,  Exodus,  362;  Romans,  18; 

Revelation,  80. 

12,    Exodus,    174;   Ephesians, 

173;   James,  107;  Revelation, 

15-19,  Leviticus,  417;  Ephe- 
sians,   146;  Pastoral  Epistles, 

97- 

17,  Leviticus,  247. 

19,  Isaiah  II.,  2^-j;  John,  114; 

Revelation,  244. 

18-20,  Leviticus,  34. 

20,   Romans,   237;  Ephesians, 

45;  James,  446. 

24,  James,  59,  85. 

25,  John  Epistles,   154. 

r.  PETER  II.,  5,  Leviticus,  139, 
186,  215;  I.  Kings,  216;  Ro- 
mans, 410. 


246 


I.  PETER  II.— II.  PETER  III. 


I.  PETER  II.,    6,    8,    Revelation, 
68. 

9,  James,  44. 

9,    10,  Ephesians,  60;  James, 

379- 

10,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  235. 

II,  James,  217. 

13,  James,  257. 

17,  Galatians,  386. 

22,  23,  Isaiah  II.,  287. 

23,  Mark,  411. 

24,    Song   of  Solomon,    318; 

Luke,  292;  Galatians,  454. 

25,  Ephesians,  239. 

I.  PETER  III.,  I,  James,  206. 

3,  4,  Pastoral  Epistles,  100. 

6,  Galatians,  294. 

15,  Luke,  245. 

18,  Isaiah  II.,   287;  Pastoral 

Epistles,  137. 

19,  Pastoral  Epistles,  327. 

20-22,    Genesis,    65,    66;    He- 
brews, 215. 

21,  Ephesians,  ^ilTi- 

I.  PETER  IV.,  I,  Philippians,  283, 

3, 4,  Galatians,  372 ;  Ephesians, 

262. 

8,     Song    of    Solomon,     TyT^y, 

James,  353. 
II,     Galatians,    402;    Philip- 
pians, 284;  James,  466,  467. 

13,  James,  466. 

14,  James,  115. 

17,  James,  168. 

18,  Chronicles,  448. 

19,  Romans,   368;  Galatians, 

418. 
I.  PETER  v.,  I,  Galatians,  256; 
Ephesians,    239;    John    Epis- 
tles, 292. 
-—2,  Romans,  277. 


L  PETER  v.,  4,  James,  89. 

8,  Pastoral  Epistles,  78. 

9,  James,  249. 

10,  Galatians,  30;  Ephesians, 

146. 

12,  John  Epistles,  173. 

II.    PETER    I.,     I,     18..    James, 
16. 

2,  Romans,  330. 

8,  James,  156. 

II,  Psalms  III.,  302. 

13-155  John  Epistles,  8. 

15,    Psalms    III.,   302;   Mark, 

232. 
16,    James,    104;    John  Epis- 
tles, 211. 

17,  James,  115. 

18,  Luke,  283. 

II.  PETER  II.,  I,   Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 297. 

3,  James,  168. 

4,  Revelation,  206. 

7,  James,  32. 

9,  John  Epistles,  211. 

10,  John  Epistles,  120. 

10-22,   Pastoral  Epistles,  48. 

11-25,  Jolin  Epistles,  309. 

18-22,  Ephesians,  262. 

II.  PETER  III.,  2,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 2>77' 

3,  James,  447. 

4-12,  John  Epistles,  211. 

7,  John  Epistles,  211. 

10,    Leviticus,   364;  Jeremiah 

I.,  239;  Hebrews,  308;  Revela- 
tion, 354. 

12,  James,  457. 

13,  Revelation,  190,  354. 

15,  John  Epistles,  173. 

17,  Galatians,  309. 

18,  Romans,  329. 


PETHOR—PHILIPPIANS  I. 


*iAl 


PETHOR.  Numbers,  261;  Ju(it;cs, 

70. 
PKTRIE,  W.  M.  F.,  Tara,  Acts  II., 

Til- 
PETRONIUS,  Acts  II..  95;  Janus, 

349- 
PFITZNER,  W.,  Acts  II.,  104- 
PFLEIDERER,    Otto,   Isaiah   II., 

127;     Galatians,     loi,     158; 

Ephesians,       4;      Philippians, 

217;  Pastoral  Epistles,  8,  10, 

II,  217. 
PHALERUM,  Acts  II.,  303- 
PHANTOMS,  Hebrews,  203,  241. 
PHARAOH,  Hardening  of  the  heart 

of,  E.xodus,  II 2-1 2 1. 
of  the    Exodus,    Exodus,    89- 

215. 
of  the  oppression.  Exodus,  22, 

sq. 
PHARAOH-HOPHRA,     Jeremiah 

n.,     148,    I49»    228;    Ezekiel, 

280,  281. 
PHARAOH-NECHO,      II.    Kings, 

4i4»  423- 
PHARISAISM,    Judges,   39'   356; 

Job,   Tf-JT,  Hebrews,  235. 
PHARISEES,  Matthew,  215,  },2-j; 

Acts  II.,  2i:S- 

Leaven  of  the,  Mark,  208-212. 

PHILADELPHIA,      Church      in. 

Revelation,  40,  58-61. 
PHILANTHROPY,  Numbers,  T.'jy 

and  faith,  Matthew,  2iTl- 

PHILEMON,      The     Epistle     to. 

(bound  with  Colossians). 
to  a  private  Christian,  Colos 

sians,  417. 
PHILEMON,  8,  Ephesians,  430- 

9,  Ephesians,  13. 

12,  Mark,  376. 


PHILEMON,  16,  Ephesians,   388. 

19,  Galatians,  423. 

22,  Ephesians,  432. 

PHILEMON  AND  BAUCIS,  Story 

of,  Acts  II.,  213. 
PHILETUS,      Pastoral     Epistles, 

PHILIP,  The  deacon.  Acts,  350- 

356. 
and  the  Eunuch,  Acts  I.,  398- 

419. 
PHILIP,  Mark,  86;   John  I.,   32, 

138;  Acts  II.,  i43»  426. 
PHILIP  OF  SIDE,  James,  325. 
PHILIPPI,  The  city.  Acts  II.,  274. 

The  Gospel  at,  Acts  II.,    i43» 

426. 

Paul  at,  Philippians,  4. 

PHILIPPIANS,  The  people.  How 
they  should  think  about  Paul, 
Philippians,  45  64. 
Paul's  mind  about  the,  Philip- 
pians, 19-44- 
PHILIPPIANS,  The  Epistle,  and 
Colossians,  Colossians,  i. 

Introductory,    Philippians,    3- 

18. 
PHILIPPIANS  L,  I,  Acts  II.,  416. 
y-j^     Galatians,    408;    Ephe- 
sians, 282. 

5,  12,  Romans,  25. 

6,   Galatians,  318;  Ephesians, 

115. 

7,  Romans,  18. 

8,  Ephesians,  no;  James,  307. 

10,  James,  206. 

1 1,  James,  56. 

12-14,    Ephesians,    214;    Pas- 

'     toral  Epistles,  362. 

13,  Ephesians,  13,  431. 

14,  Romans,  346. 


248 


PHILIPPIANS  I.—PHILIPPIANS  IV. 


PHILIPPIANS    I.,    15,    Romans, 

PHILIPPIANS    II.,     27,    James, 

393- 

330. 

16,  Galatians,  147. 

PHILIPPIANS  III.,  I,  Galatians, 

20,  Ephesians,  430. 

329;  Ephesians,  397. 

21,   Proverbs,   359;  II.  Corin- 

 2,   Galatians,  109;  Ephesians, 

thians,  183. 

53,  276;  Revelation,  384. 

23, Galatians,  256;  Peter,  154; 

3,    Leviticus,    317;   II.   Corin- 

Hebrews, 296. 

thians,  338;  Galatians,  424. 

24-26,  Ephesians,  432. 

4,  5,  Galatians,  63,  235. 

25,  Acts  II.,  411;  Ephesians, 

5,  Joshua,  319. 

428. 

6,  Acts  II.,  26;  Pastoral  Epis- 

 27-30,  Ephesians,  410;  Colos- 

tles,  55;  James,  126. 

sians,  43. 

7,  Peter,  209. 

28-30,  Galatians,  177. 

9,  Galatians,  185;  Revelation, 

29,  Peter,  191. 

369- 

PHILIPPIANS  II.,    I,  Ephesians, 

10,  Galatians,  359;  Ephesians, 

no. 

86. 

1-8,  Galatians,  397. 

12,  Romans,  18. 

2-5,  Romans,  400. 

13,  14,  Ephesians,  115. 

3,  James,  199. 

16,    Galatians,    348;    James, 

5,  II.  Corinthians,  268. 

198. 

6-9,  Leviticus,  57;  Psalms  III., 

18,  Romans,  278. 

192;    Galatians,    250;    Ephe- 

 20,   Romans,   364;   Galatians, 

sians,  93. 

160,   310;   Ephesians,   25,  ?>■], 

7,  Mark,  353;  Ephesians,  389. 

115,  262,  408. 

8,    Leviticus,   230;  Galatians, 

20,    James,    239;    Revelation, 

109. 

370. 

9-12,  Ephesians,  47. 

21,  Romans,  15,  Peter,  112. 

10,  Ephesians,  89. 

PHILIPPIANS  IV.,  I,  Ephesians, 

12,  Ephesians,  61,  390. 

410. 

13,  Ephesians,  341. 

5,    Thessalonians,    175;    Pas- 

 14,  James,  123. 

toral  Epistles,  428;  Peter,  163. 

15,    16,    Romans,   346;   Gala- 

 6,  7,  Mark,  35. 

tians,  354. 

7,  Mark,  3. 

18,  Galatians,  250. 

8,  Ezra,  115;  Galatians,  376; 

20,  Thessalonians,  8. 

Ephesians,  z^t^. 

24,  Acts  II.,  411. 

10,  16,  Leviticus,  179. 

25,  Pastoral  Epistles,  345. 

13,   Ephesians,   398;  Pastoral 

25,   30,   II.   Corinthians,  284; 

Epistles,  424. 

Ephesians,  239. 

15,  16,  Thessalonians,  5. 

26,  Romans,  27. 

22^  Romans,  22,  42^^. 

PHI  LIS  TINES— PL  0  TIN  US 


249 


PHILISTINES,  Isaiah  I.,  94,  272, 

and  Amos,  Twelve  Prophets  I., 

125,  126. 

and  I^zekicl,  Kzekiel,  22S,  2H). 

and    the    prophecies    of  Jere 

miah,   Jeremiah  II.,  2^0-2}^}). 

and  Samson,  Judges,  294,  sq. 

Art  among  the,  I.  Samuel,  yy 

84. 
capture  the  ark,  I.  Samuel,  61- 

72. 
David  and  Goliath,  I.  Samuel, 

278-291. 
David  wars  with  the,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 79-83,  III,  112. 

defeat  Saul,  I.  Samuel,  431. 

dismay  Saul.  I.  Samuel,  405. 

invade    Israel,   I.   Samuel,   93, 

208. 
partially    conquered,    Judges, 

26,  62. 

subdued,  I.  Samuel,  97-108. 

PHILO,  Acts  I.,   30;   II.,  14,  19, 

23.   96,   ^i^y,  II.  Corinthians, 

138;    Hebrews,    15,    85,    102, 


115, 
M5- 


216;     James,     50, 


on    the    character    of   Pilate, 

John  II.,  310,  31 1. 
PHILOSOPHY  and  Christianity, 

1.  Corinthians,  59. 
PHILOSTRATUS,  Life  of  Appolo- 

nius.  Acts  II.,  312. 
PHINEHAS,       accompanies      the 

army,  Numbers,  365. 
deals  with  the  two  and  a  half 

tribes,  Joshua,  2i7y?>7^- 

Zeal  of.  Numbers,  315. 

PHOEBE,  Acts  II.,  2>i2\  Romans, 

2,  422;  423. 


PHOENICIANS,  Judges,  63,  64; 

Isaiah    L,    94,    96,    288,    sq.; 

E/ekiel,  230-259. 
PHOENIX,  Job,  324. 
PHOTIUS,  Acts  I.,  vi;  II.,  263. 
PIIYGELUS,     Pastoral     Epistles, 

PIETY,  Daring,  Job,  133. 

of  Christ,  Hebrews,  -jy. 

PILATE,  Acts  II.,  3o7 

Christ    before,   Matthew,   416- 

420;    Mark,    418-424;     Luke, 
390-395- 

PILGRIMS,  Christians  as,  Peter, 
83-94- 

PIRKE  ABOTH,  Daniel,  90. 

PISGAH,  Numbers,  299. 

PLAGUES,  The,  Exodus,  121- 
170;  Psalms  III.,  134-135. 

PLATO,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  12; 
John  I.,  6;  II.  Corinthians, 
318;  Ephesians,  266;  Pastoral 
Epistles,  178,  240,  241;  He- 
brews, 222;  James,  67,  103, 
218. 

and  John,  I.  Corinthians,  54; 

John  Epistles,  217,  275. 

on  the  future  life,  Numbers,  5. 

PLAUTUS,  Ephesians,  303. 

PLEASURE,  Highest  good  not  in, 
Ecclesiastes,  133-141,  234- 
22>7' 

Innocent,  Ecclesiastes,  175. 

PLINY,  The  Elder,  Natural  his- 
tory. Acts  II.,  199;  Pastoral 
Epistles,  379,  380. 
PLINY,  The  younger,  Letters,  Acts 
L,  108,  180,  274,  276;  IL,  28, 
35,  266,  2>^y,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 83,  134. 
PLOTINUS,  Colossians,  298. 


250 


PL UMPTRE—PRA  YER 


PLUMPTRE,  E.  H.,  Ecclesiastes, 
13,  14,  97,  151;  Isaiah  I., 
182;  James,  32,  349,  399. 

PLUTARCH,  James,  163;  John 
Epistles,  136. 

PLYMOUTH  BRETHREN,  Acts 
L,  133,  198,  382. 

POLICE,  Roman,  Acts  II.,  216. 

POLITARCHS,  Acts  II.,  300. 

POLYCARP,  Acts  I.,  3,  14,  274; 
II.,  2i^'j,  446;  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 5,  338;  James,  307;  Peter, 
330;  John  Epistles,  12,  44,  65. 

POLYCRATES,  John  Epistles,  12. 

POLYGAMY,  among  the  Hebrews, 
Genesis,  7. 

Deuteronomv,  95,  Judges,  21, 

351- 
of  David,   II.   Samuel,    40;    I. 

Kings,  72^. 
Pastoral  Epistles,  119;  Peter, 

V. 

Results  of,  Leviticus,  382. 

POLYTHEISM,  Isaiah  I.,  99,  107. 
POMEGRANATES  of  high  priests 

robe,  Leviticus,  195. 
POMPEII,  Acts  II.,  466. 
POOR,    The,    Proverbs,    43,    141, 

143,  176;  Isaiah  I.,  428-443. 
Care    of,    Leviticus,    395;    I. 

Corinthians,  387-399. 

Gospel  to,  Peter,  95. 

Micah  the  prophet  of.  Twelve 

Prophets,  386-399. 
Rich  and,  Joshua,  75 ;  James, 

124-132. 
Treatment  of,   Proverbs,  288- 

302. 
POPE,  Alexander,  Galatians,  445. 
POPULARITY    of    Absalom,    II. 

Sarpuel,  220. 


PORK,  Use  of.  Acts  II.,  128. 
PORPHYRY,  Daniel,  86. 
"POSITIVE  EVIL,"  Job,  TT. 
POSITIVISM,       Proverbs,      i7?>; 

Isaiah    II.,   203,   294;   James, 

92-94. 
POSSESSIONS,  Numbers,  325. 
POSTAL  SERVICE  UNDER  THE 

ROMANS,  Acts  II.,  272. 
POTHINUS,  Acts  L,  9. 
POTIPHAR,  Genesis,  343. 
POVERTY,      Disadvantages      of. 

Proverbs,  138-140. 

of  spirit.  Job,   196. 

POWER,    and  service,   Isaiah  II., 

310-312. 
of  God,  Psalms  II.,  466,  494; 

III.,  437. 
of  the  Holy  Ghost,  Thessaloni- 

ans,  40-49. 

of  Jesus,  Luke,  267. 

a    test    of  character.   Genesis, 

125. 
POWERSCOURT,    Lady,    Letters 

and  papers  of.  Acts  I.,  198. 
PRAISE,  Psalms  HI.,  459;  Ephe- 

sians,  21-26,  203. 

and  music,  I.  Kings,  196-198. 

PRAYER,  Acts  II.,  66. 

and  answer,  Psalms  I.,  40,  44; 

II.,  248. 
and  remonstrance.  Psalms  II., 

501. 

and  victory.  Psalms  II.,  154. 

and  waiting.  Psalms  II.,  456. 

answered  without  a  miracle,'  I. 

Samuel,  100. 
Answers     to,     Joshua,     361; 

Judges,  143;  I.  Samuel,  16-18. 
before  battle.   Psalms  I.,  197- 

200. 


PR  A  YER—PRE-EXISTENCE  OF  CHRIST 


251 


PRAYER,  Call  to,  Song  of  Sol.)- 

mon,  168-179. 
Cautions  about,  Mattluw,  S2- 

Christ's  intercessory,  John  II., 

243  260. 
Christ's teachingon,  I.ukf,  177- 

194. 
deprofundis,  Song  of  Soh)mon, 

253-264. 
Delays  in  the  answer  of,   Exo 

dus,  97. 
P'xhortation.  Colossians,  355- 

36r. 
Extempore,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

96. 
for  Philemon,  Colossians,  439- 

444- 

for  rain,  James,  344-349. 

for  three  needs,  Psalms  I.,  242. 

Grounds  of.  Psalms  I.,  31. 

in  Christ's  name,  John  II.,  149. 

Intercessory,    I.    Samuel,    95, 

203;  Romans,  3. 
The    instinct    of,   Jeremiah   I., 

Love  and,  Thessalonians,  117- 

134- 

Lusts  and,  James,  22y22<^. 

Mutual  intercession,  Thessa- 
lonians, 359-374- 

Necessity  for,  Matthew,  248. 

Necessity  of.  Judges,  142. 

of  Abraham  for  Sodom,  Gene- 
sis, 178. 

of  David,  11.  Samuel,  106. 

of  faith.    Psalms    I.,    2?>;    II., 

375- 

of  Jacob,  Genesis,  297. 

of  Lot,  Genesis,  183. 

of  love,  Colossians,  395-397- 


PK.AYER,  of  Moses,  Exodus,  432- 
436. 

of    Nehciniah,    E/ra,    174- 197, 

243.  349- 

of    Paul    for    the   Colossians, 

Colossians,  3«-53- 

Right  use  of,  Joshua,  124. 

Saint    Paul  asks  for,  Romans, 

416  420. 

Spirit  of,  in  the  saints,  Ro- 
mans, 231  243. 

The  trading  spirit  in.  Genesis, 

I  So. 

True,  I.  Samuel,  99. 

Unceasing,  Thessalonians, 

222-225. 

without  understanding.  Gene- 
sis,  178. 

PRAYERS  FOR  THE  DEAD,  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  325-330. 

PREACHING,  Aim  of,  Colossians, 
144-150. 

Decline  of,  Acts  II.,  409. 

Demands  for  better,  Colos- 
sians,  138. 

Foolishness  of,  I.  Corinthians, 

47  61. 

Methods    of,   Colossians,    139- 

144. 

Self  consciousness  in,  Thessa- 
lonians, 38. 

the  word,  Isaiah  I.,  82,  9^^. 

PREDESTINATION,  Romans, 
2T^2>\  James,  397. 

PREDICTION,  Jehovah's  claim 
to,  Isaiah  II.,  120,  208. 

New  things,  Isaiah  II.,  206. 

the     rishonoth,     Isaiah      II., 

20.6. 

PRE  EXISTENCE  OF  CHRIST, 
Hebrews,  126,  sq.,  248. 


252      PREPARING  HEART— 

PROCULUS  TORPACION 

PREPARING    THE    HEART,    I. 

PRIESTHOOD,  Regulation  of  the, 

Samuel,  90;  Matthew,  27. 

Deuteronomy,  2>o7-2>^Ti. 

PRESBYTERS,  See  ELDERS. 

Representative     character     of 

PRESUMPTION  about  the  future, 

the.  Chronicles,  231. 

James,  262. 

Support  of  the,  Numbers,  215. 

PRICE,  Has  each  man  his?  Num- 

PRIESTHOOD OF  ALL  BELIEV- 

bers, 288;  II.  Samuel,  4. 

ERS,  Leviticus,  215;  Peter,  69- 

PRIDE,    Proverbs,    89,     179-190, 

?>2. 

210. 

PRIESTLY  CODE,  The,  Leviticus, 

Fall  of  Israel,  Jeremiah  I.,  280- 

12;  Numbers,  6,  12,  314,  317, 

299. 

363,  368;  Deuteronomy,  9,  19, 

PRIEST,  in  the  time  of  Solomon, 

23-25,  27,  28;  L  Kings,    191; 

I.  Kings,  141. 

Ezekiel,  402,  434,  443. 

of  Chronicles,  Chronicles,  221- 

PRIESTS    OF   THE   HEBREWS, 

239- 

Anointing    of    the,    Leviticus, 

■ Place  of,  Numbers,  340,  ^i^Ty. 

201. 

PRIESTHOOD,  Numbers,  29. 

as  types,  Leviticus,  184. 

Aaronic,  Numbers,  212. 

Investiture    of  the,   Leviticus, 

and  sacrifice,  Philippians,  150, 

191. 

.51. 

The    law    of  holiness    of    the, 

as  judges,  II.  Kings,  247. 

Leviticus,  432-446. 

Consecration  of  the.  Numbers, 

lead  across  the  Jordan,  Joshua, 

2>2. 

108. 

the     foundation      of    Christ's 

Portions    for    the,     Leviticus, 

power,  Hebrews,  43. 

175-180. 

Garments  of  Hebrew,  Exodus, 

PRIMOGENITURE,  Numbers,  35. 

400-402. 

PRINCES,   Offering  of  the,  Num- 

 Gideon's  desire  for.  Judges,  198. 

bers,  Tz- 

Human,  Numbers,  208. 

PRION,  Mount,  Acts  II.,  263. 

Idea    of,      Pastoral    Epistles, 

PRISCA,   Pastoral  Epistles,  413, 

117. 

414. 

instituted.   Exodus,   368,  403- 

PRISONS,  Deuteronomy,  390. 

408. 

PROBABALISM,  James,  2y2,272>. 

of  Christ,  Numbers,  203. 

PROBATION,     after    death,    He- 

 of  Christ  on  earth,   Hebrews, 

brews,  167. 

169. 

a  necessity  of  life,  Job,  6^^. 

of  Ezekiel,  Ezekiel,  424-446. 

PROCHORUS,'john  Epistles,7,35. 

of  knowledge.  Twelve  Prophets 

PROCTOR,  Francis,  Book  of  Com- 

II., 360-363. 

mon  Prayer,  Acts  II.,  ^iZ^- 

of  the  Temple,  I.   Kings,    198- 

PROCULUS  TORPACION,  James, 

201. 

Zio. 

PROFESSION— PROPHE  TS 


253 


PROFESSION,  not  cnouj;h.  I  ivii  - 
icus,  415. 

PROFESSION  of  relipon  and  true 
spiritualitN',  (Icni-sis,  ,^4. 

PROHIBITION.       PrinciplLs      of, 
Leviticus,  405. 

PROMISED  LAND,  Exodus,  52. 

Extent  of  the,  Joshua,  54. 

PROMISES  OF  GOD,  and  oath  of 
God,  Hebrews.   104. 

believed    by    Patriarchs,   Exo- 
dus, II. 

do  not  fail,  Joshua,  353-364. 

do  not  shrivel,  Genesis,  237. 

implies    a     threatening,      He- 
brews, 58. 

of  his  coming,  Joshua,  241. 

of    the    Covenant,    Leviticus, 

519-521. 

PROPERTY.    Ethics  of,    Exodus, 
2,22. 

Rights    of.    Exodus,   345  347; 

Deuteronomy,  356-359. 

PROPHECY,    Romans,    269-281; 
Thessalonians,  238-247. 

and  the  book  of  Daniel,   Dan- 
iel, 80-82. 

and    its  abuses,   Ezekiel,    112- 

125- 

and    martyrdom,     Isaiah    II., 

how  defective,  Hebrews,  5. 

in  the  exile,  Isaiah  II.,  61,  62, 

100. 
its  power  of  vision,   Isaiah    I., 

23-25. 
its  service  to  religion,   Isaiah 

I.,  100. 

Mission  of,  Ezra,  'j2-?s2. 

of  Christ    on    the    Mount    of 

Olives,   Matthew,  ^^yyiTi. 


PROPHECY,  on  Timothy,  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  62-64. 

Source  of,  Peter,  2yy-2yr). 

Uniqueness  of  Hebrew,  Isaiah 

II.,  248,  321. 

Unity  of,  Jeremiah  I.,  64. 

PROPHESYING,  False,  Numbers, 

of  the  seventy.  Numbers,  130. 

Oracle     regarding,     Numbers, 

142. 
PROPHET,    and    Martyr,    Isaiah 

IIv  313-335- 

a  critic.  Job,  246. 

Fallibility    of,    Jeremiah     II., 

93- 

Fate  of  the,  L  Kings,  420. 

Meanings  of  the  term.  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  65. 

of  Chronicles,  Chronicles,  240- 

269. 

Regulations  for,  Deuteronomy, 

334-355- 

rises  superior  to  his  surround- 
ings, I.  Kings,  476. 

Testing,   Deuteronomy,  338. 

their      preparation,      Judges, 

270. 

unrecognized.  Judges,  162, 

without  a  vision,  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 156-167. 

PROPHETS,  Acts  II.,  434. 

as  preachers,  Hebrews,  147. 

as  sceptics.  Twelve  Prophets  II., 

129-142. 

Book    of  the   twelve.    Twelve 

Prophets  I.,  3  10. 

Calling  of,  Numbers,  45. 

Ftilse,  Jeremiah  II.,  102-114. 

in  early  Israel,  Twelve  Proph- 

ctb  I.,  11-30. 


254 


PROPHETS— PROVERBS  XIX. 


PROPHETS,  in  the  New  Testa- 
ment, Pastoral  Epistles,  66, 
69. 

in  the  primitive  church,  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  70,  96,  115. 

of  the  Old  Testament,  Num- 
bers, 143. 

of  the  Persian  period,  Twelve 

Prophets  II.,  185-197. 

received  their  message  through 

the  Son,  Hebrews,  54. 

Visions  of  the,  Numbers,  306; 

Hebrews,  10. 

Watchmen,  Ezekiel,  287-303. 

PROSBOL,  Acts  II.,  16. 

PROSELYTES,  Acts  II.,  no,  210. 

PROSPERITY,  and  piety,  Deuter- 
onomy, 203,  444. 

and  the  spirit.  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  418-430. 

Effects  of,  Ezra,  386. 

its   dangers.    Exodus,    13;   II. 

Samuel,  160. 

misunderstood,  Judges,  388. 

not  God's  best  gift,  Deuter- 
onomy, 447, 

offered  to  Job,  Job,  137,  159. 

unbroken,  Psalms  II.,  338. 

PROVERBS,  The  Book,  Proverbs, 
1-8,  22,  211,  316,  347. 

PROVERBS  I.,  7,  Psalms  III., 
197. 

11-14,  Peter,  156. 

16,  Romans,  86. 

2^2,  James,  264. 

PROVERBS  II.,  3-6,  James,  203. 

PROVERBS  III.,  6,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 371. 

17,  James,  204. 

28,  Romans,  220. 

34)  James,  59;  Peter,  215. 


PROVERBS  IV.,  7,  Psalms  HI., 
197. 

18,  Romans,  329. 

PROVERBS  v.,  22,  Jeremiah  I., 
177;  James,  449. 

PROVERBS  VI.,  1 2,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  56. 

PROVERBS  VII.,  3,  II.  Corin- 
thians, no. 

PROVERBS  VIII.,  15,  16,  Job,  9. 

17,  Song  of  Solomon,  203. 

23,  John  Gospel,  82. 

PROVERBS  IX.,  10,  Psalms,  197. 

13,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  322. 

PROVERBS  X.,  II,  Jeremiah  I., 
85;  Peter,  314. 

12,  James,  59,  353;  Peter,  169. 

20,  Psalms  III.,  130. 

PROVERBS  XL,  i,  Ezekiel,  452. 

2,  Daniel,  195;  Twelve  Proph- 
ets I.,  424. 

4,  Daniel,  195. 

5,  Pastoral  Epistles,  371. 

7,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  56. 

10,  11.  Kings,  122. 

PROVERBS  XII.,  17,  Twelve 
Prophets  II.,  140. 

22,   Twelve  Prophets  II.,  140. 

PROVERBS  XIV.,  5,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets IL,  140. 

9,  James,  448. 

PROVERBS  XVI.,  4,  Chronicles, 
288. 

7,  Hebrews,  285. 

9,  Jeremiah  I.,  212. 

18,  Daniel,  219. 

2-^,  28,  James,  177. 

PROVERBS  XVHL,  4,  Peter,  314. 

19,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  2i2)- 

PROVERBS  XIX.,  II,  I.  Kings, 
115. 


PROVERBS  XIX.—PRUDENTIUS 


253 


PROVKRBS    XIX.,    2  1.   Jeremiah 

PROVIDENCE  OF  GOD,  and    so- 

I..    212. 

li.ilism,    Deuteronomy,    207. 

PROVKRBS    XX..     2,    8,     26,    I. 

Complaints  against  the,  Num 

Kings,  1  14. 

bers,   1 1 9. 

12,  Peter,  27S. 

continuous,  Chronicles,  463. 

PROVERBS  XXI..  3.  I-  Kings,  214. 

the  Divine  Potter,  Jeremiah  I., 

8,  Romans,  212. 

2,77  y)7- 

PROVERBS  XXII.,    I,  Ezra,  217. 

Enigma  of  the.  Job,  207. 

13,  II.  Kings,  255. 

ever  in  operation,  Joshua,  146. 

21,  Psalms  II.,  212;  Jeremiah 

for    each     one.    Genesis,     158; 

I..  212. 

Judges.  9. 

26,  II.  Kings,  135. 

illustrated    in    Isaac,    Genesis, 

■ 12,   Twelve  Prophets  II.,  36S. 

210. 

PROVERBS XXV.,  18,  Jeremiah  I., 

in  death,  II.  Samuel,  286. 

197. 

in   history,    I.    Kings,    55;    II. 

> — 21,  Jeremiah  I.,  266;  Romans, 

Kings,  245. 

342- 

Imperfect        instruments       of, 

PROVERBSXXVI.,ii,  Peter,  321. 

Judges,  58,  84. 

PROVERBS XXVII.,  i,  James,  264. 

Master  strokes  of  the,  Judges, 

2}^,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  122. 

158. 

PROVERBS  XXVIII.,  9,  Jeremiah 

not    to    be    hurried,    Joshua, 

I..  259. 

195- 

13,  Joshua,  180;  James,  338. 

Observing,  Ezra,  86. 

18,  James,  245. 

recognized  by  Joseph,  Genesis, 

30,     Twelve      Prophets       II., 

374.  381. 

140. 

rules,  Jeremiah  L,  212. 

PROVERBS  XXX.,  i.  II.  Samuel, 

Seeming  injustice  of,  Jeremiah 

364- 

1-323. 

25,    26,  Psalms  II.,  356. 

seems  casual,  I.  Samuel.  279. 

PROVERBS    XXXI.,    19,   Chroni- 

 Special,  Job,  225. 

cles,  195. 

Sterner  aspect  of.  Psalms  III., 

15,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  368. 

29. 

24,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  80. 

Successive.  Joshua,  124,  253. 

PROVIDENCE  OF  GOD,  Genesis, 

to   be  acknowledged,  II.  Sam- 

139; Philippians,  60. 

uel.  76. 

and  the  book  of  Job,   Deuter- 

 to  the  individual.  Exodus,  66. 

onomy,  204. 

Trust  in  the,  Ecclesiastes,  161- 

and     nations,     Deuteronomy, 

164. 

210. 

a  wonderful  scheme,  I.  Samuel, 

and    opportunity,    I.    Samuel, 

121. 

316. 

PRUDENTIUS,  Acts  I.,  158. 

256 


PSALMS— PSALM  XXIII 


PSALMS,  Book  of,  the  hearts  echo 

PSALM    XIV,    3,    Romans,   308; 

to  the  speech  of  God,   Psalms 

Revelation,   240. 

I. 

PSALM  XV,  4,  Jeremiah  I.,  132. 

Individuahsm  in,  Job,  I2. 

PSALM  XVI,  5,  Ephesians,  50. 

PSALM  I,  4,  Daniel,    153;   Lphe- 

10,  Acts  11.,  208. 

sians,  275. 

12,  Daniel,  180. 

PSALM  II,  6,  7,  Revelation,  240. 

PSALM  XVII,  12,  Twelve  Proph- 

 7,  Revelation,  iii. 

ets  II.,  59. 

9,    Jeremiah    I.,    291;   Daniel, 

PSALM    XVIII,   2,   Deuteronomy, 

153- 

123. 

9-12,  Revelation,  17. 

4-16,  Revelation,  213. 

12,  I.  Samuel,  147. 

6-15,  II.  Kings,  22. 

PSALM  III,  II,  Samuel,  250. 

7,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  511. 

PSALM  IV,  4,  Ephesians,  294. 

7-9,  I.  Kings,  440. 

6,  Peter,  72. 

10,  Revelation,  74. 

PSALM  V,  3,  Numbers,  345 ;  Eze- 

14,  Peter,  156. 

kiel,  473. 

20,  Isaiah  II.,  217. 

7,    Jeremiah    I.,    153;  Daniel, 

25,  Jeremiah  I.,  81. 

226. 

29-50,  11.  Kings,  406. 

9,  Romans,  86. 

PSALM  XIX,  4,  Romans,  279. 

PSALM  VI,  I,  Jeremiah  I.,  211. 

8,  Jeremiah  I.,  85. 

6,  Song  of  Solomon,  174;  Jere- 

 10,  Jeremiah  I.,  232. 

miah  II.,  59. 

12,  Leviticus,  119, 

PSALM  VII,  4»  Jeremiah  L,  79. 

14,  Peter,  70. 

II,  Song  of  Solomon,  142. 

PSALM  XX,  II.  Samuel,  no,  in. 

PSALM    VIII,    2,    Hebrews,    34; 

6,  II.  Kings,  406 ;  Song  of  Solo- 

Peter, 74. 

mon,  259. 

4,  Hebrews,  34. 

7,  Chronicles,  z'^'j. 

PSALM  IX,  7,  Revelation,  67. 

9,  Jeremiah  I.,  230. 

II,  Revelation,  240. 

PSALM  XXI,  9,  II.  Kings,  18. 

11-14,  Jeremiah  I.,  321. 

14,  Jeremiah  I.,  230. 

12,  Isaiah  II.,  426. 

PSALM  XXII,  Matthew,  426. 

15,  Revelation,  96. 

1,  John  Epistles,  70. 

PSALM  X,  7,  Romans,  86. 

14,  Song  of  Solomon,  176. 

PSALM  XI,  2,  Jeremiah  I.,  190. 

16,  20,  Revelation,  384. 

5,  Peter,  178. 

21,  Pastoral  Epistles,  426. 

PSALM  XII,  4,  Peter,  331. 

22,  Hebrews,  39. 

5,  Revelation,  64. 

27,  II.  Samuel,  120. 

PSALM  XIV,    I,    I.    Samuel,    79; 

30,  31,  Peter,  35. 

Romans,  48,  86;  James,  265. 

PSALM  XXIII,  I,  I.  Samuel,  261; 

4,  Jeremiah  L,  79,  2^1. 

Philippians,  62. 

rSALM  XXIII 

—PSALM  XIV                       257 

PSALM     XXIII,     3.     I.    Samuel, 

PSALM  XXXIV,  7,  II.  Kings,  68. 

336. 

7-10,  Daniel,  228. 

5,    Leviticus,   90;   Luke,   j68; 

9,  Peter,  65. 

Revelation,  94. 

12-16,  Peter,  122. 

6,  Jcremiali  I.,   174. 

PSALM  XXXV,  19  2  1,  Jeremiah  I., 

PSALM  XXIV,  I,  Acts  I.,  257. 

394- 

■ 2,  Jeremiah  I.,  234. 

PSALM  XXXVI,  I,  Romans,  86. 

3,  4,  James,  245;   John   Epis- 

 6,  Ezekiel,  240. 

tles,  266. 

7,  Deuteronomy,  430;  Revela- 

 6.  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  22,?,. 

tion,  211. 

14,  Hebrews,  106. 

8,  Leviticus,  90. 

PSALM  XXV,  3,  Peter,  196. 

9,  Daniel,   151;  John  Epistles, 

14,  Romans,  406. 

189. 

PSALM  XXVII,  I.  Samuel,  3S7. 

10,  Jeremiah  I.,  85. 

4,  Hebrews,  61. 

PSALM  XXXVII.  II.  Samuel,  48; 

8.  Numbers,  70. 

James,  85. 

10,  Jeremiah  I.,  11. 

2^,  Jeremiah  I.,  212. 

12,  Twelve  Prophets  IL,  134. 

34,  Peter,  196. 

PSALM  XXVIII,  2,  Pastoral  Epis- 

PSALM XXXVIII,  I,  Jeremiah  I., 

tles,  97. 

211. 

13,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  235. 

5,  Peter,  219. 

PSALM    XXX,    I,    John    Epistles, 

II,  12,  I.  Kings,  418. 

181. 

20,  Jeremiah  I.,  190. 

4,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  511. 

PSALM  XXXIX,  I,  II.  Kings,  340; 

5,  Song  of  Solomon,  202. 

Jeremiah  I.,  421. 

7,  Jeremiah  I.,  210. 

3,  Ezra,  115. 

PSALM  XXXI,  2,  Peter,  70. 

13,  Chronicles,  317. 

7,  Jeremiah  I.,  212. 

14,  Jeremiah  I.,  184. 

13-15,  18,  19,  Jeremiah  II. ,25. 

PSALM    XL,    6-8,    Leviticus,    56, 

18,  19,  Romans,  342. 

119;  I.  Kings,  214. 

20,  Revelation,  46. 

9,  10,  Peter,  78. 

21,  Revelation,  355. 

PSALM  XLI,  10.  Jeremiah  I.,  423. 

24,  Deuteronomy,  123. 

PSALM  XLII,  4,  II.  Kings,  313. 

PSALM    XXXII,    I,    2,    Romans, 

5,  Twelve  Prophets  II. ,  511. 

1 10. 

8,  Twelve  Prophets  II. ,  511. 

3,   5,  Joshua,  180;  Galatians, 

10,  Ezekiel,  335. 

21. 

PSALM  XLIV,  3,  Joshua,  148. 

PSALM  XXXIII,  4.  Daniel,  202. 

8,  Proverbs,  353. 

5.  Ephesians,  93. 

PSALM  XLV,  I.  Kings,  136. 

12,  Jeremiah  I.,  240. 

3-5,  Revelation.   19. 

17,  I.  Kings,  148. 

8,  I.  Kings,  495. 

258 


PSALM  XLV— PSALM  LXXVLL 


PSALM  XLV,    9-15,    Revelation, 

PSALM  LXI,  2,  Peter,  70. 

321. 

PSALM  LXII,  II,  Jeremiah  I.,  79. 

PSALM  XLVI,  IL  Kings,  342. 

12,  Leviticus,  558. 

1-7,  Revelation,  85. 

PSALM  LXIII,  I,  Joshua,  297. 

Ill,  IL  Kings,  295. 

4,  Pastoral  Epistles,  97. 

2,  Revelation,  141. 

PSALM  LXIV,  4,  Jeremiah  I.,  190. 

4,    Jeremiah    L,     86;    Twelve 

PSALM  LXVI,  12,  Peter,  179. 

Prophets  IL,  155. 

18,  Ezekiel,  124. 

PSALM    XLVIII,    2,    Revelation, 

PSALM  LXVIII,  Ephesians,  229. 

241. 

17,  Galatians,  217. 

PSALM  XLIX,  II,  Peter,  153. 

18,  Peter,  74. 

15,  Peter,  32. 

■ 27,  Joshua,  318. 

16,  17,  Ecclesiastes,  163. 

60-64,  I-  Samuel,  yi. 

PSALM  L,  3,  Daniel,  248. 

PSALM  LXIX,  Romans,  397. 

8-12,   Leviticus,   30;  I.  Kings, 

2,     II.     Kings,    454;    Twelve 

,214. 

Prophets  II. ,  511. 

15,  Revelation,  137. 

4,  Jeremiah  I.,  98. 

PSALM  LI,  II.  Samuel,  183,  191. 

5,  Jeremiah  I.,  190. 

4,  Leviticus,  119;  Romans,  81; 

6,  Peter,  196. 

Pastoral  Epistles,  137. 

9,  Romans,  395. 

5,  Leviticus,  325. 

22s,  Daniel,  209. 

7,  Revelation,  loi. 

28,  Jeremiah  I.,  358. 

16,  17,  I.  Kings,  214;  Ezekiel, 

30,  31.  I-  Kings,  215. 

483- 

PSALM  LXXII,  II,  Revelation,  9. 

PSALM  LII,  3,  Jeremiah,  197. 

15,  I.  Kings,  229. 

8,  Romans,  303. 

16,  John  I.,  215. 

10,  Jeremiah,  260. 

PSALM  LXXIII,  17,  Song  of  Solo- 

PSALM LV,  6,  Jeremiah  I.,  188. 

mon,  326. 

12-14,  Revelation,  55. 

26,  Song  of  Solomon,  204. 

13,  14,  Jeremiah  I.,  192. 

44,  Song  of  Solomon,  44. 

15,  Daniel,  208. 

PSALM   LXXIV,  8,  9,  Chronicles, 

17,  Daniel,  226. 

241. 

18,  Acts  IL,  121. 

9,  Daniel,  116;  Twelve  Proph- 

PSALM LVII,  4,  Jeremiah  I.,  197; 

ets  L,  9. 

Daniel,  220. 

- — 13,  Revelation,  202. 

PSALM  LVIII,  6,  Daniel,  220. 

PSALM    LXXV,    8,    Jeremiah    I., 

II,  Revelation,  9. 

292;  Luke,  370. 

PSALM  LIX,  I.  Samuel,  309-311. 

PSALM  LXXVI,  6,  II.  Kings,  342. 

15,  James,  293. 

10,  II.  Kings,  140. 

PSALM  LX,  5,  Jeremiah  I.,  292. 

PSALM    LXXVII,    7,    I.    Samuel, 

12,  Romans,  194. 

392. 

PSALM  LXXVII— PSALM  CV 


250 


rSALM      I.XXVII.     lo,     Joshua, 

361 ;  Peter,  196. 

18,  Jeremiah  I.,  233. 

PSALM  LXXVIII.  2,  Peter,  32. 

20,  Jeremiah  I.,  174. 

49,   Twelve  Prophets  II.,  316. 

59,  60,  67-69,  Chronicles,  55. 

60,  Jeremiah  I.,  29. 

60-64,  Joshua,  314;  I.  Kings. 

149. 

68,  Revelation,  240. 

71,  Ephesians,  50. 

PSALM  LXXIX,  I,  II.  Kings,  461. 

2,  3,  II.  Kings,  460. 

6,  7,  Jeremiah  I.,  211. 

PSALM  LXXX,  I,  Jeremiah  I.,  91- 

7,  Numbers,  "jo. 

PSALM  LXXXI,  Numbers,  350. 

12,  Romans,  49,  254. 

PSALM  LXXXIII,  6-8,  Chronicles, 

85- 

8,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  169. 

10,  II.  Kings,  124. 

27,  James,  227. 

PSALM  LXXXI V,  3,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets, 59. 

PSALM  LXXXV,  8,  II.  Kings,  395- 

PSALM   LXXXVL   9.   H.   Samuel, 
120. 

PSALM  LXXXVII.  II  Samuel,  119, 
120.  * 

4.  5,  II.  Kings,  301. 

7,  John  Lpistles,  227. 

PSALM       LXXXVIII,      Numbers, 
205. 

7,  Leviticus,  43. 

50.  Twelve  Proj)hels  I.,   179. 

PSALM  LXXXIX,  Job,  57. 

6,  Daniel,  191. 

9,  10,  II.  Kings,  301. 

14,  Ephesians,  416. 


PSALM    LXXXIX,    I 


[,eviticus, 


509. 

2,T,  Peter,  141. 

PSALM  XC,  I,  John  I.,  247. 

9,  John  Epistles,   153. 

PSALM  XCI,  4.  n.  Kings,  58. 
II,  II.  Kings,  68;  Revelation, 

365- 

14,  Deuteronomy,  123. 

PSALM  XCII,  4,  5,  Thessalonians. 

288. 

7-9,  Revelation,  302. 

12-14,  II.  Samuel,  127. 

PSALM  XCIV,  9,  Jeremiah  I.,34i- 
PSALM  XCV,  7,  Hebrews,  56. 
PSALM  XCVI,  Ecclesiastes,  258. 

5,  James,  153. 

13,  Revelation,  245. 

PSALM  XCVII,  10,  Deuteronomy, 

123. 
PSALM      XCVIII,       Ecclesiastes, 

258. 

PSALM  XCIX,  I,  Revelation,  70. 

8,  Numbers,  170. 

PSALM  C,  I,  4,  II.  Samuel,  120. 

PSALM  CII,  6,  8,  I.  Kings,  418. 

13-16,  Leviticus,  538. 

— -22,  11.  Samuel,  120. 

25,  Peter,  339. 

PSALM  cm,  2,  3,4, 10-12.  James, 
470. 

^15,  16,  James,  85. 

PSALM  CIV,  3,  11.  Kings,  22. 

4.  I.  Kings,  432. 

5,  Peter,  358. 

5>  6,  8,  James,  469. 

7,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  108. 

15,  Revelation,  95. 

PSALM  CV,  9,  10,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets I.,  435. 

15,  Isaiah  I.,  131. 


260 


PSALM  CVI— PUNISHMENT 


PSALM  CVI,  23,  Isaiah  II.,  358. 

30,  31,  Chronicles,  224. 

2i^,  Jeremiah  I.,  108,  117. 

PSALM  CIX,  2^,  Peter,  122. 

PSALM  CX,  I,  4,  Mark,  445. 

4,  Hebrews,  113. 

7,  Revelation,  m. 

PSALM  CXIII,  5,  Revelation,  223. 

PSALM  CXIV,  Joshua,  112,  113. 

PSALM  CXVI,  I,  Deuteronomy, 
123. 

10,  Romans,  273;  II.  Corin- 
thians, 165. 

16,  17,  Leviticus,  105. 

PSALM  CXVIII,  6,  Peter,  216. 

8,  9,  Ezra,  79. 

22,  Peter,  75. 

27,  I.  Kings,  91. 

PSALM  CXIX,  19,  Chronicles,  317. 

45,  Peter,  321. 

6y,  71,  Peter,  152, 

y?>,  ?)6,  Jeremiah  I.,  190. 

PSALM  CXX,  5,  Jeremiah  I.,   84. 

7,  Peter,  124. 

PSALM  CXXI,  Numbers,  68. 

PSALM  CXXII,  2,  3,  Ezra,  212. 

3-5, 1.  Kings,  66  ;Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  290. 

PSALM  CXXIII,  I,  Daniel,  201. 

4,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  285. 

PSALM  CXXIV,  2-6,  Revelation, 
213. 

7,  Revelation,  7. 

PSALM  CXXV,  5,  Galatians,  447. 

PSALM  CXXVI,  1-3,  Ezra,  47. 

PSALM  CXXX,  4,  Chronicles,  451. 

PSALM  CXXXI,  7,  Isaiah  I.,  439. 

PSALM  CXXXII,  13,  14,  Revela- 
tion, 184. 

PSALM  CXXXIII,  Ezekiel,  446. 

2j  Leviticus,  203. 


PSALM    CXXXIII,  3,  Revelation, 

240. 

PSALM  CXXXIV,  2,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 97. 

PSALM  CXXXV,   6,   Daniel,  202; 
Peter,  346. 

PSALM  CXXXVI,  I.  Kings,  334; 
Jeremiah  I.,  316. 

6,  Jeremiah  I.,  234, 

17-22,  Leviticus,  558. 

PSALM    CXXXVII,  9,  II.   Kings, 
94;  Ezra,  359. 

PSALM  CXXXIX,  9,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets I.,  402. 

12,  Daniel,  151. 

2T^^  24,  Leviticus,  119. 

PSALM  CXL,  3,  Romans,  ^6. 

PSALM  CXLI,  Numbers,  345. 

2,  Exodus,  419;  Leviticus,  71 ; 

Ezekiel,  473. 

PSALM  CXLIII,  2,  Romans,  107. 

PSALM  CXLV,  13,  Daniel,  202. 

20,  Deuteronomy,  123;  Peter, 

84. 

PSALM  CXLVI,  3,  Ezra,  195. 

8,  Peter,  84. 

PSALM  CXLVII,  I,  James,  66. 

2,  Ezekiel,  311. 

19,  Revelation,  227. 

PSALM    CXLVIII,    1-13,    Reve!.-.- 
tion,  75,  "^6. 

PSALMODY,  Beginning  of  Chr Ti- 
tian, Ephesians,  347-349. 

Paul's  use  of,  Colossians,  33  .;- 

332- 

PTOLEMAIS,  Acts  II.,  96,  425- 

PUBLIC     WRONGS,    Indifference 
to,  Ecclesiastes,  205,  226. 

PUDENS,  Pastoral  Epistles,  415. 

PUNISHMENT,  Fear  of,  John  I., 
187. 


P  UNISIIMENT—Q  UtE  TISM 


261 


rilNISHMENT,  of  children,  Prov- 

Prophets    I,     282,     284-286; 

erbs,  312. 

Mark,      190-194;    Colossians, 

of  Mymenaeus  and  Alexander, 

103-105;   John   Epistles,    181, 

Pastoral  Kpistles,  74-76. 

182. 

of    sin.     Job,     59;     Jeremiah 

Christ's,  John  I.,  262. 

r..    3jS;    Thessalonians,  335- 

Jesus  Christ  restores  to,  Prov- 

SS7- 

erbs,  103-105. 

Painful,  II.  Samuel,  2,2^6. 

Laws    of,    Deuteronomy,   396- 

PURiriCATION   of   heaven,    He- 

410. 

brews,   163. 

Loss  of.  Proverbs,  95-102. 

of  the  tabernacle,  Hebrews,  163. 

of  Joseph,  Genesis,  346. 

Water  of.  Numbers,  216. 

Personal,   Thessalonians,  151- 

PURIM,  Feast  of,  established,  E/ra, 

168. 

401-403. 

PURVEY,  John,  James,  200,  212, 

PURITANISxM,  Deuteronomy, 1 89. 

447- 

and  the  restoration,  Isaiah  I., 

PUSEY,    Dr.    E.    B.,    Daniel,    41, 

364.  365- 

i34>     1 35;    Twelve     Prophets 

Militant,      necessary,     Deuter- 

II.,   117,  358,  526;  John    II., 

onomy,  200. 

356. 

New     Testament,     II.    Corin- 

PUTEOLI,  Acts  II.,  465. 

thians,   2T,-J-2:\y. 

Paul  at.  Acts  II.,  465. 

PURITY,  Judges,  350;  II.  Samuel, 

PYTHAGORAS,     John     Epistles, 

167}   Psalms  I.,   235;  Twelve 

136. 

QUADRATUS,  Apology  of,  Acts  I., 

viii;  II.,  318. 
QUAILS,  Numbers,  129. 
QUARESMIUS,       Terrae     Sa7ictae 

Elucidatio,    Acts    I.,    67;    II., 

57- 


QUARRELS  and  the  tongue.  Prov- 
erbs, 167. 

Pride  the  cause  of,  II.  Samuel, 

295- 

QUEEN  OF  HEAVEN,  The,  Jere- 
miah II.,  197-208. 

QUIETISM,  Acts  IL,  446. 


262 


RA A MSES— RECORDS  OF  THE  PAST 


RAAMSES,  Death  of,  Exodus,  43. 

RABSHAKEH  of  Sennacherib,  II. 

Kings,    332;    Isaiah    I.,    343- 

351- 
RACE-COURSE,    Paul's  figure  of 

the,   I.   Corinthians,   211-226; 

PhiHppians,  259-280. 
RACHEL,  Death  of,  Genesis,  317. 

Tomb  of,  I.  Samuel,  148. 

RAHAB,   and    her     life,     Joshua, 

84. 
Faith  of,  Joshua,  87;  Hebrews, 

261;  James,  161-164. 

saved,  Joshua,  153-164. 

The  scarlet  thread  of,  Joshua, 

92. 

Speech  of,  Joshua,  18. 

RAILING  at  dignities,  James,  415- 

418. 
RAIN,  Elijah  and  the,   I.    Kings, 

399-403- 
RAINBOW,     The,    symbolical    to 

Noah,  Genesis,  y^y. 
RAMAH,    Captives    for    Babylon 

start  from,  II.  Kings,  466. 
RAMAH,  fortified    by    Baasha,  I. 

Kings,  325. 

Rachel  and,  Jeremiah  11.,  335. 

RAMOTH-GILEAD    captured    by 

Jehoram,  II.  Kings,  108. 
RAMSAY,  VV.  M.,  Acts  I.,  103;  II., 

100,  198,  200,  213,  260,  261, 

Z^Z^  364^  374- 

RASHNESS,  Proverbs,  170. 

RATIONALISM,     Pastoral    Epis- 
tles, 2^%-j, 


RATIONALISM,  Perils  of,  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  385-396. 

RAVEN,  Sending  forth  Noah's, 
Genesis,  70. 

RAWLINSON,  Sir  Henry,  Ecclesi- 
astes,  35,  135,  270,  271;  Jere- 
miah II.,  71;  Ezekiel,  230. 

REAL  and  ideal.  Job,  152. 

REALISM,  in  art,  Proverbs, 
66. 

in    moral  teaching.   Proverbs, 

92-105. 

of  Isaiah,  Isaiah  I.,  27-30. 

of  Jeremiah,  Jeremiah  II.,  301. 

REBEKAH,  Genesis,  243-251; 
Peter,  iii,  112. 

aids  Jacob  to  deceive  his  father, 

Genesis,  269. 

RECHABITES,  The,  Jeremiah  II., 

44-53- 

RECOMMENDATIONS,  II.  Corin- 
thians, 105-108. 

RECONCILIATION,  Romans, 

141;  II.  Corinthians,  210-223; 
Hebrews,  78. 

Double,  Ephesians,  1 31-142. 

The   holiest   place    a    symbol, 

Hebrew,  152. 

Purpose    of,    Colossians,    100- 

115- 
through     Christ,    Colossians, 

85-99. 
RECORDS  OF  THE  PAST,  Isaiah 

I.,  198,  308,  309,  448;  IL,  59, 

62;  Daniel,  22,  59,    148,   169, 

192,  193. 


RED  SEA— 

■RELIGION                              263 

REDSEA.  Exodus,  20S  215;  Niiin- 

REHOBOAM,     The    kingdom    di- 

bcrs,  T,9>y,  Psalms  III.,  142. 

vided    uiidir,    I.     Kings,     273- 

passage,    a    type  of  baptism. 

2S5. 

Pastoral  Epistles,  289. 

Reign  of.  Chronicles,  320  325. 

REDEEMERof  Job,  Job,  222-242. 

succeeds    Solomon,    I.     Kings, 

REDEMPTION,  a  cause  for  thank 

269. 

fulness.  Colossians,  6469. 

REITH,  George,  John  I.,  56. 

Final,  Ephcsians,  50-64. 

REJECTION  of  God,  Thessaloni- 

of  the  first  born.  Numbers,  38. 

ans,  147- 

of  Israel,    Political  by   Cyrus, 

REJOICE,    Philippians,   323326; 

Isaiah  II.,  271. 

Thessalonians,  217-222. 

of  Israel,  spiritual  by  SerTaitt, 

RELIGION,  and  the  child.  Exodus, 

Isaiah  II.,  271,  273. 

25- 

of  a    nature,    Isaiah    I.,    188- 

and  enjoyment,  Genesis,  22,  64. 

194. 

and  prosperity.  Twelve  Proph- 

 signified  by  the  Passover,  Num- 

ets II.,  425. 

bers,  86. 

and  the  State,  Judges,  36,  75. 

Unity  and  graciousness  of  the 

Decay  of.  Job,  16. 

plan  of,  Peter,  29-40. 

Evolution  of,  Job,  180. 

REFORMATION,     Character     of 

Four  points  of  a  true,   Isaiah 

the,  II.  Corinthians,  125. 

II.,  i43-i6r. 

of  the  church,  Joshua,  145. 

Guardians  of.  Numbers,  26. 

of  society,  John  I.,  268. 

In  the  name  of,  I.  Samuel,  231. 

The  true,  Judges,  155. 

is  opportunity.  Twelve  Proph- 

See JOSIAH. 

ets  I.,  144. 

REFORMERS,   Judges,  154;  Acts 

Jewish,  hereditary.  Chronicles, 

I.,  152. 

54- 

REFUGE,  Cities  of.  Numbers,  400; 

Law   and,    Deuteronomy,  239- 

Joshua,  326-339. 

252. 

REGENERATION,  Laver  of.  Pas- 

 of  history,  Ezra,  295  306. 

toral  Epistles,  285,  292. 

of  the  individual,  Ezekiel,  143- 

Washing  of,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

158. 

285,  292. 

of  Israelites,  Numbers,  9. 

See  CONVERSION. 

of  joy,  Leviticus,  473. 

REHOB,    King   of  Zobah.   David 

of  morality,  I.  Samuel,  300. 

wars  against,  II.  Samuel,   113, 

of  Semites,  Job,   180. 

114. 

Popular  and  true,  Jeremish  I., 

REHOBOAM,   Abijam  succeeds.  I. 

J  49-2 1 4. 

Kings.  318. 

Power  of.  Numbers,  303. 

invasion  of  Shishak,  I.  Kings, 

Quietness  of  true,   John  Epis- 

315- 

tles,  300-309. 

264 


RELIGION— REST 


RELIGION,     Reasonableness     of, 

Twelve  Prophets  I.,  419-425. 

Shame,  James,  180,  192. 

True,  Judges,  314,  315. 

will    not   take   care    of    itself, 

Judges,  223. 
REMINISCENCE,      Plato's     doc 

trine  of,  Hebrews,  222. 
REMNANT,  The,  Isaiah  I.,  31,  87, 

126,  129. 
REMONSTRANCE,        Chronicles, 

423- 

REMORSE,  Proverbs,  77. 

and  free-will,  James,  93. 

Christ    never  knew,   John  II., 

277. 

RENAN,  M.,  Job,  342,  399;  Isaiah 
Im  350,  351 ;  IIv  149 ;  Jeremiah 
L,  61,  65;  II.,  70,  76,  162, 
360,  361,  372 ;  Daniel,  72, 161  •, 
Matthew,  443;  Acts  I.,  53; 
II.,  215,  369;  I.  Corinthians, 
263,  346;  Galatians,  65,  277; 
Ephesians,  11,  12,  244,  283; 
Pastoral  Epistles,  8,  11,  79, 
276,  355»  407;  James,  50, 122, 
128,  371;  John  Epistles,  15, 
17,  20,  22,  53,  85,  86,  163, 
245,  293,  309. 

REN AUDOT,  Eusebe,  Acts  IL,  256. 

RENDALL,  Frederic,  Hebrews, 
320,  323. 

REPENTANCE,  Numbers,  287; 
Twelve  Prophets  I.,  333-345- 

and     forgiveness.    Chronicles, 

448-454. 

by  tithes.  Twelve  Prophets  II., 

Foundation    of,    James,     245- 

249. 
Imperfect,  Judges,  40. 


REPENTANCE,  of  Abraham, 
Genesis,  108. 

of  David,  II.  Samuel,  181-192 

of  Esau,  Genesis,  275-277. 

of  Israel,  I.  Samuel,  Zy. 

of  Joseph's  brethren.  Genesis, 

385. 

Peter  taught,  Acts  I.,  132. 

unto  life,  II.  Corinthians,  248- 

261. 

REPETITIONS,  in  prayer,  Ezra, 
181. 

REPHAIM,  I.  Kings,  79. 

REPHIDIM,  Joshua,  27;  I.  Corin- 
thians, 232. 

REPRESSION,  and  development 
in  morals,  Deuteronomy,  100. 

not  taming,  Colossians,  204. 

REPROOF,  Proverbs,  175. 

RESCH,  A.,  James,  56,  90,  233, 
362. 

RESIGNATION  of  Eli,  I.  Samuel, 

57- 
RESPONSIBILITY,  for  our  gifts, 

Exodus,  429. 

graded,  Leviticus,  120-133. 

in  advising,  Judges,  370. 

Neglected,  a  sin,  Exodus,  75. 

of  a  leader.  Numbers,  126. 

of  teachers,  James,  165-170. 

Personal,      Psalms     II.,    128; 

Proverbs,  128. 
Samson  had  a  sense  of.  Judges, 

304. 

to  God,  Deuteronomy,  204. 

to  law.  Exodus,  323. 

unavoidable,  Genesis,  155. 

REST,  described  by  the  Psalmist, 

Psalms,  61. 
from    labor    the    rudimentary 

Sabbath,  Hebrews,  60. 


REST—REVELA  TION  /. 


265 


REST,  the  ideal  of  the  Old  Testa- 
ment,  Hebrews,  58. 

in  Canaan,  Hebrews,  61. 

offered  by  Christ,  Hebrews,  58. 

RESTRAINT,    and    its    removal, 

Thessalonians,  2)'^y2iA'^- 
RESURRECTION,   The,  Isaiah  I., 
Ti%-j,    444-452;     Ezekicl,     349, 
350. 

Belief  in  the,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

267,  353-363. 

Consequences    of    denying,    I. 

Corinthians,  355-369. 

Doctrine  of,  Hebrews,  %-j. 

Evidence  of.  Acts  II.,  133. 

Hope  in  the,  of  Christ,   Peter, 

18-26. 

life    and    daily    d3ing,    Phili})- 

pians,  237-258. 

of  Christ,   Matthew,  429-438; 

Mark,  437-441;  John  I.,  93- 
97;  I.  Corinthians,  325-354; 
Ephesians,  84-88 ;  Hebrews, 
72. 

of  the  dead  in  Christ,  Thessa- 
lonians, 169-182. 

The  spiritual  body  in,  I.  Corin- 
thians, 371  386. 

to  bring  joy,  John  II.,  231. 

The  witness  of  men   and  the, 

John  Epistles,  241-253. 

RETRIBUTION,  Judges,  138;  I. 
Samuel,  68;  Chronicles,  360- 
365;  Psalms  II.,  244;  Hebrews, 
191,  300. 

Law  of,  Job,   215;   Isaiah  I., 

342;  Ezekiel,  145,  150;  Thes- 
salonians, 292. 

of  David,  II.  Samuel,  178,  179. 

REUBEN,  and  his  father's  blessing, 
Genesis,  425. 


REUBEN,  saves  Joseph,   Genesis, 

typical  of  some  Christians,  Gen- 
esis, i;},?,. 
REUBEN,    The    trihr,    and    Gad, 

Numbers,  374. 
blessed     by      Moses,      Deuter- 
onomy, 463. 

their  decay.  Numbers,  380. 

REUBENITES,  Claim  of  the,  Num- 
bers, 200,  202. 
REUNION   OF    CHRISTENDOM, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  267. 
REUSS,    Edward,    Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, II;  James,  141,  166,  390, 
399- 
REVELATION,  Actual,  Jeremiah 
I.,  242. 

Conditions  of,  Isaiah  II.,  yT,. 

Method    of,    Isaiah    II.,    100, 

148. 

Need  of,  Proverbs,  375-385. 

of  God,  Hebrews,  294,  sq. 

REVELATION,    The    book.   Pas- 
toral Epistles,  48,  68. 

The  Epilogue,  Revelation, 375- 

392. 

The  prologue.   Revelation,     i- 

20. 

when  written,  Daniel,  155. 

REVELATION    I.,   2,  John   Epis- 
tles, 89. 

3,  James,  103. 

4,  John  Epistles,  2>2>- 

5,   Ephesians,  47;   John  Epis- 
tles, 115. 

7,  Daniel,  248. 

9,  Revelation,  317. 

10,  Galatians,  269. 

12,  13,  Leviticus,  476. 

13,  Daniel,  248. 


266 


REV  EL  A  TION  I.— RE  VELA  TLON  XLIL 


REVELATION    I.,    14,   Leviticus, 

REVELATION  V.,   35,   Leviticus, 

365- 

35. 

15,  Daniel,  294. 

REVELATION  VI.,  9,  John  Epis- 

 16,  Ephesians,  421. 

tles,  309. 

17,  18,  Song  of  Solomon,  261. 

10,  Jeremiah  II.,  68;  Romans, 

18,  Romans,  251,  2>'^2i. 

292;  Pastoral  Epistles,  327. 

20,  Numbers,  81. 

REVELATION  VII.,  2,  II.  Corin- 

REVELATION II.,   2,    Galatians, 

thians,  52. 

12;  Ephesians,  239. 

7,    Joshua,    320;    John    Epis- 

 4,  5,  Pastoral  Epistles,  26. 

tles,  29. 

10,  James,  89;  John  Epistles, 

9,  Pastoral  Epistles,  394. 

183.        • 

14,  15,  Leviticus,  357. 

12,  Ephesians,  421. 

15,  James,  97;  John  Epistles, 

13,    Romans,   20;  John  Epis- 

19; Revelation,  224. 

tles,  2>2>.  234. 

17,  Luke,  399. 

14,   20,  Daniel,  165;  Pastoral 

24,  Peter,  19. 

Epistles,    48;    John    Epistles, 

REVELATION   VIII.,    2,    Twelve 

275- 

Prophets  II.,  316. 

- — 18,  Leviticus,  365. 

3,  Exodus,  419. 

20,  II.  Kings,  124;  Peter,  306. 

4-8,  James,  44. 

22,  James,  227. 

REVELATION  IX.,  i-ii.  Exodus, 

24,  John  Epistles,  4. 

159- 

2y^  Psalms  I.,  19. 

17,   Twelve  Prophets  II.,  106. 

28,  Daniel,  324. 

20,  John  Epistles,  275. 

REVELATION    III.,    i,    Pastoral 

REVELATION  X.,  6,  Exodus,  303; 

Epistles,  154. 

Daniel,  327. 

7,  8,  12,  John  Epistles,  303. 

REVELATION  XL,   8,   II.   Corin- 

 12,  Galatians,  456. 

thians,  121;  Galatians,  298. 

14,  Psalms  II.,  499. 

15,  Ephesians,  47. 

20,  Romans,  371. 

REVELATION  XII.,  5,  II.  Corin- 

 21,   Galatians,   256;  Hebrews, 

thians,  347. 

309- 

7-10,  Ephesians,  400. 

REVELATION  IV.,  8,  John  Epis- 

 9,  Song  of  Solomon,  220;  John 

tles,  19. 

Epistles,  183. 

II,  Peter,  135,  174. 

10,    James,    256;    John  Epis- 

REVELATION v.,  i,  Romans,  384; 

tles,  19. 

Ephesians,  53. 

14,  Daniel,  237,  246. 

5,  Numbers,  27. 

16,  Ezra,  196. 

9,  John  Epistles,  114. 

REVELATION   XIII.,    2,    Daniel, 

10,  Peter,  y2. 

239- 

12,  James,  193. 

7,  Leviticus,  127. 

REV  EL  A  TION  XIIL— REVERENCE 


267 


REVELATION     XIIL,    8,    Ki)he 
sians,  2^. 

lo,  John  Epistles,  j^v 

REVELATION XIV.,  7.  John  Fpis 
ties,  29,  211. 

10,  Luke,  370. 

II,  John  Epistles,   ig. 

12,  John  I'pistles,  234. 

REVELATION XVI.,  5,  John  Epis- 
tles, 29. 

14,  Daniel,  320. 

15,  Thessalonians,  188. 

16,  Joshua,  303. 

19,  Jeremiah  I.,  292. 

REVELATION  XVII.,  i,  James, 
168. 

5,  Galatians,  363. 

6,  Revelation,  201. 

14,  Ephesians,  47. 

22,,  James,  96. 

REVELATION XVIII.,  9. 1 8.  Peter, 

20,  James,  168;  John  Epis- 
tles, 163. 

REVELATION  XIX.,  8,  Leviticus, 
201 ;  Romans,  150. 

II,  Psalms  III.,  191. 

13-15,  Ephesians,  421. 

19,  Daniel,  320. 

REVELATION  XX.,  1-8,  John  Epis- 
tles, 275. 

4,  John  Epistles,  309. 

6,       Leviticus,     215;      Mark, 

HI- 

7,  Ezekiel,  370. 

10,  John  Epistles,  19,  183. 

1 1,  Daniel,  153;  John  Epistles, 

214. 
12,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  314; 

John  Epistles,  210. 
14,  Uunicl,  I2y 


REVELATION   XXL,  3,  E.xodus, 
376;  Hebrews,  153. 

6,  John  Epistles,  29. 

S,  John  Epistles,  89. 

9,  Song  of  Solomon,  45  ;  Mark, 

62. 

-10,  Hebrews,  218,  296. 

12,  James,  44. 

17,  Mark,  334. 

18,  22,  John  Epistles,  69. 

19,  20,  John  Epistles,  55. 

22,     I.     Kings,     221;    Twelve 

Prophets  I.,  313. 

24,  II.  Corinthians,  182. 

27,  Leviticus,  343;  Galatians, 

355;    Peter,    151;  John  Epis- 
tles, 55. 

REVELATION XXIL,  i,  2,  Ezekiel, 
487;  John  Epistles,  29. 

2-5.  Joshua,  188;  Ezekiel,  498. 

6,  Romans,  16. 

8,   Luke,  403;  Acts  II.,    130; 

John  Epistles,  56. 

10,  Daniel,  262. 

II,    Daniel,    329;   Luke,   363; 

Galatians,  352. 

12,  20,  Romans,  2,6^. 

13,  Matthew,  450. 

14,  John  Epistles,  115. 

15,  Leviticus,  343;  John  Epis- 
tles, 55,  275. 

17,  Peter,  151;  John  Epistles, 

29. 

21,  John  Epistles,  H- 

REVENGE,   Proverbs,   316;   Mat- 
thew, 76;  Thessalonians,  213. 

of      David,      I.      Kings,      96- 

103. 

REVERENCE,    Exodus,    49,    95; 
Deuteronomy,  83. 

for  the  aged,  Leviticus,  413, 


268 


RE  VERENCE—RIZPAir 


REVERENCE,   for    parents,    Deu- 

RIGHTEOUSNESS,    Psalms    IL, 

teronomy,  85. 

459;  Isaiah  II.,  127,  215;  Eze- 

taught,   Exodus,  424;   Leviti- 

kiel,   1 51-153;    Matthew,    79; 

cus,  ZT?- 

Ephesians,  328-329. 

RE  VUE  ARCHAEOLOG/Q  UE, 

Conviction  of,  John  II.,  217. 

Acts  I.,    175;    II.,    198,    361, 

Fruits  of,  Philippians,  35. 

364,  374- 

Isaiah's  doctrine  of,  Isaiah  I., 

REWARDS,    Doctrine    of,    Philip- 

344;  II.,  215-230. 

pians,  2>^T^. 

Man  not  saved  by.  Job,  ^?>?,. 

Teaching  of  Christ  concerning. 

of  Abraham,  Genesis,  140. 

Matthew,  279-285. 

of  faith,  Philippians,  217-236. 

REYNOLDS,    H.    VV.,    Revelation, 

of  Israel,  Isaiah  II.,  217. 

350. 

of  Jehovah,    Isaiah    II.,   224, 

REZIN,  King  of  Syria,  and  Pekah, 

265,  392,  410,  436. 

11.   Kings,  227-231;  Isaiah  I., 

Triumph  of.  Chronicles,  295. 

103. 

Word  of,  Hebrews,  88. 

REZON,  I.  Kings,  253. 

RIGHTEOUSNESS  OF  GOD,  Ro- 

RHEMISH VERSION,  James,  ^0, 

mans,  32. 

200,  292,  427,  430,  447,  457- 

RIGHTS,   and  duties.  Judges,  30, 

RICH,  and  poor,  James,  124-132. 

256. 

Follies    and    iniquities   of  the. 

of  the   person.    Exodus,   339- 

James,  274-284. 

345- 

their  end,  James,  284-287. 

of  property.  Exodus,  345-347- 

RICH   YOUNG   MAN,    The,  Mat- 

 of    strangers,    Exodus,      353- 

thew,     273-279;    Mark,    274- 

357- 

281. 

RITSCHL,  Albrecht,  II.  Corinthi- 

RICHES, and  poverty,  Joshua,  75. 

ans,  213. 

Dangers  of  the.  Numbers,  ^77; 

RITUAL,    and    character,     Gala- 

Matthew,  276-279;  Mark,  281- 

tians,  435-447. 

287. 

and  formality,  Twelve  Proph- 

 Dedication  of,  Numbers,  75. 

ets  I.,  156-180. 

Obligations  of,  Judges,  390. 

Growth    of    the    Levitical,    I. 

Strife  for,  Joshua,    199,   200; 

Kings,  186-192. 

Proverbs,  144-147. 

Importance      of,     Chronicles, 

Trust  in,  Ecclesiastes,  193-195. 

333-3,3,7- 

without  work,  Joshua,  307. 

of  Ezekiel's  vision,  Ezekiel,  462- 

RIDICULE,  Fear  of,  Joshua,  137. 

484. 

RIGHTEOUS,  Death  of  the,  Num- 

 of  the   Tabernacle,   Leviticus, 

bers,  296. 

29-236. 

h  a  ve  j  udgment  here,  Peter,  189- 

Overgrowth  of,  Ezekiel,  94. 

200. 

RIZPAH,  II.  Samuel,  344- 

ROADS— ROMANS  II. 


269 


ROADS,  Anrknt,  Acts  II.,  2>7^  -260, 

ROMANS  I.,  7,  Acts  II.,  60;  Rev- 

271. 

elation,   369. 

ROBBERS,  and  ihc  Apostles,  Acts 

15,  Ephesians,  416. 

II.,  199- 

1 6,  Ephesians,  9;  Peter,  58. 

ROBERTSON,   F.  \V.,  I.  Corinthi 

16-18,    II.    Corinthians,    212; 

ans,  2\\  Ephesians,  265,  332. 

Galatians,  130;  Ephesians,  36, 

on  Balaam,  Numbers,  320. 

^2>h  431- 

ROBERTSON,  J.  Craigie,  History 

17,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  140; 

of  the    Christian    church,   He- 

II. Corinthians,  95;  Galatians, 

brews,  262. 

186;    Ephesians,     12;    Philip- 

ROBES  of  the  High-priests,  Leviti- 

pians, 218;  James,  167. 

cus,  192. 

18,  Galatians,   368;  Hebrews, 

ROBESPIERRE,  Proverbs,  2>77- 

287. 

ROBINSON,  J.  A.,  Acts  I.,  419- 

19,  Ezra,  22;  Ephesians,  125. 

ROCK,  God  a.  Psalms  II.,  219. 

20,   Ephesians,  270;  Hebrews, 

ROD  OF  AARON,  Numbers,  2oy. 

16;  James,  229. 

ROD    OF    MOSES,    Exodus,    71, 

21,  Jeremiah  I.,  80;  Ephesians, 

255- 

263;  James,  123. 

ROGERS,  H.,  Romans,  2^7,. 

23,  Psalms  III.,  145. 

ROLL,  The  sealed,  opened,  Revela- 

 24-32,  Peter,  155. 

tion,  86-110. 

26,  Jeremiah  I.,  175. 

ROMAN  CHURCH,  its  neglect  of 

28,   I.  Samuel,  79;  Ephesians, 

Paul,    Pastoral    Epistles,    28, 

53- 

400,  420,  421- 

ROMANS  II.,  2,  3,  James,  168. 

ROMAN  FAS,  Deuteronomy,  64- 

5,  Daniel,  261 ;  Revelation,  346. 

66. 

7,  Ephesians,  439;  Revelation, 

ROMANS,  John  Epistles,  26. 

346. 

ROMANS,  The  epistle,  and  Colos- 

8,  James,  199. 

sians,  Colossians,  i. 

9,  10,  Galatians,  130. 

Coincidences  with   James,    57, 

II,  Galatians,  114. 

100,  272. 

13,  James,  102. 

Time,  place  and  occasion,  Ro- 

 15,  II.  Corinthians,  295. 

mans,  1-9. 

16,  Mark,  3;  Pastoral  1  j.istles. 

ROMANS  I.,  I,  Ephesians,  389- 

360. 

2,  Pastoral  Epistles,  389. 

17  29,    Galatians,    427,    439; 

3,  Acts  I.,  44;  Galatians,  250; 

James,  167. 

Revelation,  385. 

20,  Ephesians,  385. 

4,  Psalms  I.,  18;  Songs  of  Solo- 

 2*3-27,  Galatians,  143. 

mon,  310;  Ephesians,  61,  ?>%\ 

25,    Jeremiah    I.,    207;    Gala- 

Thessalonians,  58. 

tians,  130,  306;  James,  56^ 

5,  Galatians,  121. 

2T,  James,  133. 

270                           ROMANS  IL- 

-ROMANS  V. 

ROMANS  II.,  28,  29,  Philippians, 

ROMANS  IV.,  15,  Galatians,  143, 

178. 

144,  150,  307- 

ROMANS  III.,   I,  Galatians,  130, 

16,  Galatians,  151,  310. 

438. 

17,  II.  Corinthians,  26;  Gala- 

 2,   Jeremiah  I.,  127;  Pastoral 

tians,  184,  206,  445. 

Epistles,  52;  Peter,  173. 

19,  James,  158. 

3,  Hebrews,  103. 

20,     Pastoral    Epistles,    424; 

4,  Pastoral  Epistles,  137. 

James,  122. 

7,  Galatians,  321. 

24,  25,  Galatians,  156;  Philip- 

 8,  Galatians,  439;  James,  168. 

pians,  220. 

10-18,  Galatians,  222. 

25,  Leviticus,  355. 

19,  Galatians,  223;  Ephesians, 

ROMANS  v.,  I,  2,  Galatians,  2>^y, 

36,  96. 

Philippians,  220. 

20,   Galatians,  144,  150,  307. 

1-8,  Galatians,  149. 

21,  II.  Corinthians,  119;  Gala- 

 2,  Peter,  185. 

tians,  324;  James,  23. 

3,  James,  57,  65. 

22-26,  Galatians,    155;   Ephe- 

 5,  Galatians,  171. 

sians,  T^6;  Philippians,  218. 

9,    Leviticus,    142;   II.   Corin- 

 24,  Galatians,  149,  151;  Ephe- 

thians, 198;  Ephesians,  61. 

sians,    61;    Philippians,     220; 

10,   Leviticus,   227;  II.  Cor  n- 

John  Epistles,  105. 

thians,          212;        Galatians, 

25,  Exodus,  379;  Hebrews,  165. 

251. 

26,  Galatians,  155. 

II,    Leviticus,    98;    Proverbs, 

28,  James,  141. 

^7?^■ 

29,  Mark,  339;  Galatians,  220; 

12,  Ephesians,  104. 

Ephesians,  249. 

12-21,  Galatians,  198. 

31,  Galatians,  2i2>7- 

14,  Galatians,  143,  157;  Ephe- 

ROMANS IV.,  Genesis,  140. 

sians,  T^y. 

1-4,  Galatians,  151,  161. 

— ^15-18,  Ephesians,  112, 

2,  Galatians,  402. 

16,  James,  168. 

3,  6,  Exodus,  280;  James,  156. 

17,    18,  Galatians,   224;  Phil- 

 6,  II.  Corinthians,  119. 

ippians,  218. 

7,  Hebrews,  146. 

18,  Hebrews,  171. 

9-13,  Galatians,  183. 

— -18-21,  Joshua,  186. 

11,   Leviticus,   317;  II.  Corin 

19,    Leviticus,   57,   230;   Phil- 

thians,     52;     Ephesians,     53; 

ippians,  220. 

James,  45. 

20,    Numbers,    ?>y,  Galatians, 

12,  Galatians,  348. 

1 50,  2 1 3,  307 ;  Ephesians,  1 1 1 ; 

13-20,      Ephesians,      55;    He- 

Hebrews, 143. 

brews,  319. 

21,   II.   Corinthians,  91,  122; 

14,  15,  Galatians,  189. 

Galatians,  149,  224. 

ROMANS  VI.— ROMANS  VIII. 


271 


ROMANS  VI.,  T,  2,r.alatians,233; 

Kphcsians,  371. 

i-4,  Galatians,   173. 

4,    Ephcsians,   67,   371;   John 

Epistles,  125. 

5,  Galatians,  157. 

6,    12,  Galatians,   352;   Kphe- 

sians,  246. 

7,  Ephesians,  36. 

10,  Hebrews,  171. 

IT,  Colossians,  245. 

12,  Galatians,  159. 

13,  Ephesians,  86. 

14,  Galatians,  357. 

17,  II.  Corinthians,  120,  316. 

19,  Numbers,  41. 

2T^.    Song    of  Solomon,    229; 

Galatians,      224;      Ephesians, 

1 12. 
ROMANS  VII.,  1-6,  Ephesians,  36. 

4,  5,  23,  24,  Galatians,  352. 

5,  24,  Galatians,  150. 

6,  Colossians,  245. 

7-24,  Galatians,  66,  145,  216. 

10,    Numbers,    87;  Galatians, 

142. 

12,  14,  Galatians,  150. 

13-24,  Galatians,  213. 

14,11.  Corinthians,  119;  Ephe 

sians,  104. 

15,  II.  Corinthians,  319. 

16,  Ezekiel,  364. 

19,  Leviticus,  341. 

22,  23,  Psalms  II.,  27;   Peter, 

22,,  Galatians,  159;  James,  57, 

217. 

24,  Galatians,  228,  307. 

ROMANS  VIII.,  I,  Galatians,   145, 

159. 
1-4,  Ephesians,  36. 


ROMANS  VIII.,  2,  Ezekiel,  364; 
Galatians,  228,  357;  Ephe- 
sians, 25. 
3,  Leviticus,  342;  I.  Corinthi- 
ans, 2i^y,  Galatians,  343,  359, 
444;  Ephesians,  282. 

4,  Ezekiel,  366;  Galatians,  185, 

307- 

5-1 1,      Matthew,    325;    Gala- 
tians, 416. 

9,  II.  Corinthians,  134;  Gala 

tians,  160,  299. 

10  13,  Galatians,  352. 

1 1,  Leviticus,  357;  Ephesians, 

205;    Galatians,    160;    Phili|) 
jiians,  246. 

14,  Ephesians,  160. 

15,  Galatians,  253;  Ephesians, 

31;  Pastoral  Epistles,  315. 

17,  Galatians,  172,  177;  Ephe- 
sians, 43. 

18,   Galatians,   30;   Peter,  35, 

120,  229. 

19,  Galatians,  412;  Ephesians, 

28;  Revelation,   187. 

19  22,    Leviticus,     364,     454, 

512. 

20,  Leviticus,  207,  364,  454. 

21,  Leviticus,  365;  Revelation, 

34,  71,  82,  245,  354. 

23,   II.   Corinthians,   55,  180; 

Ephesians,  61,  63. 

24-28,  Philippians,  356. 

26,  zy,  Ephesians,  205. 

2y,  John  Epistles,  233. 

28-39,  Galatians,    151;   Ephe- 
sians, 12,  30. 

29,  Leviticus,  386;  Ephesians, 

29;  Revelation,  200,  2>^2i- 

30,  Philippians,  25  ;  Peter,  222t. 

31,  Isaiah  II.,  ^t^^. 


272 


ROMANS  VIIL— ROMANS  XIII. 


ROMANS  VIIL,  31-39,  Galatians, 
44,  255;  Ephesians,  115; 
Revelation,  386. 

32,  II.  Corinthians,  39;  Ephe- 
sians, 312. 

2i?i^  34>  Isaiah  II.,  288;  Gala- 
tians, 204. 

34,  Ephesians,  91. 

37,  Ephesians,  410;  John  Epis- 
tles, 232,  235. 

ROMANS  IX.,  I,  Galatians,  108; 
James,  307. 

1-5,  Galatians,  319. 

4,  5,  Galatians,  130,  244,  438. 

5,    Galatians,    250;    Pastoral 

Epistles,  429;  Revelation,  81, 

324- 

6,  Revelation,  118. 

7,  Jeremiah  I.,  96. 

II,  Ezekiel,  187. 

13,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  350. 

19,  Galatians,  321. 

22,   Galatians,  56;  Ephesians, 

III. 

25,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  235. 

2?i,  Galatians,  159. 

ROMANS  X.,  2,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

58;    James,    181,    198;   Peter, 

3,  Philippians,  218. 

4,    Leviticus,    169;  Galatians, 

222. 

5,  6,  Deuteronomy,  451. 

6-8,  Hebrews,  12. 

7,  Ephesians,  86. 

8,  Ephesians,  372,  2>72>- 

9,  Galatians,  156;  Ephesians, 

6i. 

10,  Acts  II.,  y6. 

12,  Acts  I.,  339. 

14,  Ephesians,  56. 


ROMANS  X.,  16-20,  Isaiah  II.,  6. 
ROMANS  XL,  I,  2,  Galatians,  130, 

319- 

2,  Chronicles,  15. 

2,  26,  29,  Leviticus,  537. 

5,  Galatians,  151 ;  Revelation, 

215- 

6,  Galatians,  309. 

7,  10,  Ephesians,  270. 

12,  15,  Leviticus,  471. 

13,  Galatians,  loi. 

13-24,  Galatians,  440. 

15,  Leviticus,  538. 

16,   Leviticus,   70;  Ephesians, 

6;  Revelation,  244. 

17,  Jeremiah  I.,  260. 

25,    Leviticus,    470;   Pastoral 

Epistles,  132. 

26,  Jeremiah  I.,  123. 

Z2>-2i^^  Ephesians,  12,  26. 

ROMANS   XIL,    I,  Exodus,  201; 

Leviticus,   59;   I.   Kings,  216; 

Ephesians,  no;  Peter,  72. 

4-9,  Exodus,  no. 

5,  I.  Kings,  438. 

6-8,  Peter,  172. 

7,    8,    Ephesians,   239;   Peter, 

173. 

8,  II.  Corinthians,  265. 

10,  Peter,  56. 

12,    Ephesians,    423;    Thessa 

lonians,  225. 

15,  Peter,  120. 

19,  Jeremiah  I.,  266. 

21,   Peter,   90;  John  Epistles, 

232. 
ROMANS  XIIL,  I,  James,  257. 

2,  James,  168;  Peter,  ^%. 

3,  Peter,  169. 

4,  Leviticus,  485. 

8,  9,  Ephesians,  46. 


J^OMA  NS  XIII.  —K  US  KIN 


273 


ROMANS  XIII.,  9,  Galatians,  341. 

10,  Gahtians,  342. 

H-14,  Ephesians,  410;  James, 

416. 

12,  Ephesians,  399. 

13,  James,  198. 

14,  Ephesians,  286. 

15,  Peter,  ^2. 

ROMANS  XIV.,  4.  Song  of  Solo- 
mon,  2>2i?i\  James,  258. 

6-8,   Hebrews,  321. 

lo,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  314; 

John  Epistles,  214. 

12,  Galatians,  400. 

14,  Ezra,  268;  Galatians,  140. 

15,  Hebrews,  320. 

18,  Pastoral  Epistles,  369. 

20,  21,  Leviticus,  251, 

21,  Galatians,  389. 

22,  Chronicles,  159. 

23,  Daniel,  165;  James,  122. 

ROMANS  XV.,  1-4-  Galatians,  397. 

3,  Ephesians,  47. 

5-7,  Galatians,  160. 

6,  7,  Ephesians,  206. 

. 8,  II.  Corinthians,  39. 

9,  II.  Samuel,  361 ;  James,  319. 

15,  16,  Ephesians,  13. 

16,   17,  Galatians,    loi,  401; 

Philippians,  151. 

19,  II.  Corinthians,  362;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  361. 

20,  Isaiah  II.,  287. 

24,   28,  Pastoral  Epistles,  14. 

29,  Thessalonians,  39. 

30-32,  Ephesians,  428. 

ROMANS  XVI.,  I,  2,  Acts  II., 
T^2>2\  Pastoral  Epistles,  361; 
John  Epistles,  22. 

2,  Colossians,  43. 

3.  Pastoral  Epistles,  414. 


ROMANS    XVI.,     5,     Colossians, 

403;    Revelation,  244. 
7,    Galatians,    12;   Ephesians, 

239- 

7j  1 1,  Acts  II.,  7. 

13,  Mark,  426. 

16,  Peter,  231. 

17,    18,  Galatians,  109;  John 

Epistles,  293. 

20,  Ephesians,  410. 

22,  Acts  II.,  50. 

22i,    Pastoral    Epistles,    415; 

John  Epistles,  301,  302. 

25,  Pastoral  Epistles,  132. 

25,  26,  Galatians,  248;  Ephe- 
sians, 12,  45,  129,  157;  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  360. 

zy.  Pastoral  Epistles,  429. 

ROME,  Christianity  at,  Romans, 
408-410. 

Paul  and  the  fall  of,  Thessa- 
lonians, 324-328. 

Paul's  voyage  to,  Acts  II.,  450- 

471. 

a  world  center,  John  I.,  25. 

ROUTH,  Martin  J.,  Reliquiae  Sac- 
rae,  Acts  I.,  81;  John  Epis- 
tles, 31,  35- 

RUBIES,  Valley  of,  Proverbs,  49. 

RULERS,  and  ruled,  Thessa- 
lonians, 201-216. 

responsible  to  God,  Leviticus, 

129. 

RUSKIN,  John,  nominal  and  prac- 
tical religion,  Ezekiel,  256. 

on  the    flower,    Deuteronomy, 

94. 

on  gifts  to  the  Temple,  Num- 
bers, 75. 

on  the   gloom    of   history,    I. 

Kings,  43. 


274 


/v'  USKIN—R  UTHERFORD 


RUSKIN,  on  a  thunderstorm, 
Exodus,  151;  I.  Kings,   440. 

on  walls.  Song  of  Solomon,  172. 

quoted.  Job,   t^-J2,  374,  396. 

RUTH,  and  David,  I.  Samuel, 
272. 

The  story  of.  Judges,  363-420. 

RUTH,  The  book,  Date  of,  Judges, 
409. 


RUTH  I.,  16,  Hebrews,  261. 

RUTH  H.,  I,  H.  Kings,  224. 

10,  19,  Psalms  HI.,  407. 

19,  Jeremiah  I.,  176. 

RUTH  IV.,  15,  Jeremiah  I.,  85. 

RUTHERFORD,  Samuel,  Song  of 
Solomon,  45;  II.  Corinthians, 
314;  Ephesians,  243;  Thessa- 
lonians,  47. 


SA  BA  TJER-  SA  CKIFICES 


275 


SABATIER,    M.,   II.   Corinthians, 

29,  177,  202;  Galatians,  132. 

SABBATH,  and  Nehemiah,  Ezra, 

344-347- 

Breach  of  the,  Numbers,  180. 

Christ  and  the,  Matthew,  157, 

159;    Mark,    66-70;    John    I., 

193- 

in  Chaldea,  Numbers,  346. 

in  GaHlee,  Luke,  148-161. 

law  of  Ezekiel,  Numbers,  348. 

a    means    of   unity.   Numbers, 

191. 
Obligation    for  the.   Numbers, 

348. 
Observance  of  the.  Acts  II.,  16, 

393-397;      Colossians,      231, 

233;  Hebrews,  60,  62,  166, 
Social  aspect  of  the,  Numbers, 

189. 
Social  service  and  the,  Isaiah 

II.,  414-422. 
to  be  observed,  Exodus,  248, 

305-312;  Deuteronomy,  71. 
A  warning,  Jeremiah  I.,  364, 

376. 
SABBATIC  YEAR,  The,  Leviticus, 

502-518;  Jeremiah  I.,  347. 
SABEANS,     Job,     65;    Arts    II., 

344- 
SABELLIUS,  Hebrews,  28. 
SACERDOTALISM,  Numbers, 

209;   Deuteronomy,  267,  268- 

270;  Chronicles,  234. 
not    in    the   New   Testament, 

Exodus,  408. 


SACRAMENTS,  Hebrews,  255. 

Old  Testament,  Isaiah  I.,  74. 

Romish  doctrine  of,  I.  Samuel, 

65- 

SACRED  PLACES,  Numbers,  391. 

SACRED  YEAR,  Numbers,  343. 

SACRIFICE  OF  JESUS  CHRIST 
for  us.  Judges,  251;  Job,  62; 
John  I.,  375-386. 

made  to  restore  holiness,  Gene- 
sis, 66. 

of  none  effect  if  not  accepted, 

Genesis,  36. 

Restraining    influence    of    the, 

Genesis,  67. 

See  Jesus  Christ,  ATONE- 
MENT. 

SACRIFICES  TO  GOD  and  Chris- 
tianity, Deuteronomy,  267- 
276. 

to   be    in    the    spirit.    Genesis, 

200. 

SACRIFICES,  Gifts  and,  Philip- 
pians,  353-368. 

Laws    of,    Deuteronomy,   253- 

266. 

of     burnt-offering,     Leviticus, 

29-62. 

of  guilt  offering,  Leviticus,  155- 

174. 

of  mcal-ofl'ering,  Leviticus,  63- 

81. 

of  peace-offering,  Leviticus,  2,2- 

108. 

of  sinofferirjg,  Leviticus,  109- 

154. 


276 


SA  CRIFICES— SAMSON 


SACRIFICES,  of  the  Temple,  I. 
Kings,    196-221. 

Priests  portions  of,  Leviticus, 

175-180. 

Significances  of,  Numbers,  360. 

SADNESS  of  Nehemiah,  Ezra,  188- 
190. 

SADDUCEES,  Matthew,  214,  324; 
Mark,  330-336;  Acts  II.,  ^2>- 

SAFETY,  Psalms  I.,  26,  169. 

SAINTS,  I.  Corinthians,  22;  Phil- 
ippians,  12;  Colossians,  11-14, 
58;  Hebrews,  214;  James, 
378. 

SALMON,  Dr.  George,  Psalms  II., 
280;  Acts  I.,  2, 8, 10,69,79,135, 
358,  417;  II.,  289;  Ephesians, 
4;  Pastoral  Epistles,  8,  113, 
407;  James,   21,   50,   55,    69, 

71.  139,  385,  425,  431- 
SALT,  for  the  meal-offering,  Leviti- 
cus, 75. 
forthe  speech,  Colossians,  367- 

370. 

of  the  earth,  Matthew,  63-66. 

SALVATION,  aims  at  perfection  of 

character.  Genesis,  221. 

and  law,  Hebrews,  31. 

the  end  of  God,  Thessalonians, 

347.  348. 
for    an   end,    Ephesians,    109- 

119. 
the  gift  of  God,  Genesis,   306; 

Thessalonians,  344-346. 
the  Idea  of  God,  Thessalonians, 

342- 

in  sight,  Isaiah  II.,  428-444. 

introduced  through  the  affec- 
tions. Genesis,  252. 

its  execution  by  God,  Thessa- 
lonians, 346,  347. 


SALVATION,  Personal,  Judges, 
151;  Thessalonians,    195-197. 

to  the  uttermost,  Thessaloni- 
ans, 65. 

to  be  worked  out,  Phihppians, 

132-139- 

Work  of  the  Trinity  in,  Peter, 

3-16. 

SAMARIA,  See  SHECHEM. 

Isaiah  I.,  95-147,  152-158. 

besieged    by    Shalmaneser,  H. 

Kings,  240. 

Conversion    of.    Acts    I.,   355, 

sq.,  366-384. 

Elisha  and  the  Syrians  at,  II. 

Kings,  76-86. 

Idolatry  at,  L  Kings,  352, 355. 

inhabitants        deported,       II. 

Kings,  247. 

Jehu  and,  II.  Kings,  125. 

Later  inhabitants  of,  II.  Kings, 

248. 

Peter  and    John    in,    Acts    I., 

369-384- 
ShalmaneserlV.  and,  II.  Kings, 

279. 
Tiglath    Pileser    II.    and,    II. 

Kings,  278. 
SAMSON,  Birth  announced  by  the 

angel.  Judges,  266-271. 
compared       with      Abraham, 

Judges,  281. 
dauntless    in    battle.    Judges, 

293-306. 
failed  in  fidelity  to  God,  Judges, 

302. 

Faith  of,  Hebrews,  362. 

in  Gaza,  Judges,  307-318. 

Last  days  of.  Judges,  3^9-334- 

plunging  into  hfe,  Judges,  279- 

292. 


SAMSON— I.  SAMUEL  XII. 


277 


SAMSON,  Riddle  of.  Judges,   290. 

to  be  a  NazariLe,  Judges,  276. 

SAMUEL,  and  Saul  at  Gilgal,  I. 
Samuel,  205,  216,  248. 

and    the    witch    of  Eiidor,     I. 

Samuel,  409. 

anoints  David,  I.  Samuel,  25-r- 

264. 

anoints  Saul,   I.  Samuel,  145- 

156. 

Arrangements  for,   I.   Samuel, 

20. 

as  Judge,  I.  Samuel,  106. 

David  flees  to,  I.  Samuel,  312. 

dealings    with    the    people,    I. 

Samuel,  193-204. 

Death  of,  I.  Samuel,   7,y^-T^2>\. 

First  meeting  of  Saul  and,   I. 

Samuel,  133-144. 

grieved  with  Saul,   I.  Samuel, 

247. 

Israel  demands  a  king  of,    I. 

Samuel,  109-120. 

kills  Agag,  I.  Samuel,  250. 

the  last  of  the  Judges,  I.  Sam- 
uel, I. 

Message  to,  I.  Samuel,  54. 

^The  name,  I.  Samuel,  18. 

not  jealous  of  Saul,  I.  Samuel, 

178. 

recognized    as    a    prophet,    I. 

Samuel,  59. 

Review  of  the  life  of,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 391-393- 

Saul    brought    to,    I.   Samuel, 

121-132. 

Vindication  of  himself,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 181-192. 

Vision  of,  I.  Samuel,  49-60. 

SAMUEL,  Book  of,  II.  Samuel, 
388-400. 


L  SAMUEL  L,  x.  Psalms  III.,  348. 

4>  i3»  Jeremiah  I.,  165. 

9,  Psalms  I.,  T^y. 

26,  Daniel,  226. 

I.  SAMUEL  II.,  8,  Psalms  II., 
362;  III.,  208;  Daniel,  151. 

12,    Jeremiah    I.,    d^y^   Twelve 

Prophets  I.,   7^22. 

27-36,  I.  Kings,   118. 

2i6,  Ezekicl,  43  r . 

I.  SAMUEL  III.,  I,  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 157. 

3,  Psalms  I.,  38. 

I.  SAMUEL  IV.,  I,  Joshua,  296. 

I.  SAMUEL  v.,  I,  10,  Joshua, 
296. 

5,  Ezekiel,  428. 

6,  Jeremiah  I.,  12. 

I.  SAMUEL  VI.,  13,  Isaiah  II., 
363- 

20,  Isaiah  I.,  64. 

I.  SAMUEL  VII.,  6,  Joshua,  350; 
Ezra,  128. 

14,  Joshua,  255. 

16,  Joshua,  318. 

17,  Joshua,  318,  350. 

I.  SAMUEL  VIII.,  10-18,  I.  Kings, 
241. 

15,      Deuteronomy,      301;     I. 

Kings,  143. 

I.  SAMUEL  IX.,  9,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets I.,  20. 

31,  Joshua,  318. 

I.  SAMUEL  X.,  2,  Jeremiah  I.,  146. 

5,  Daniel,  30. 

26,  Joshua,  318. 

I.  SAMUEL  XII.,    17,    Isaiah    I., 

113- 

19,  Psalms  III.,  75. 

23,  Jeremiah  I.,  163;  Hebrews, 

263. 


278 


/.  SAMUEL  XIIL—II.  SAMUEL  XVI. 


I.   SAMUEL  XIII.,  9,   Psalms    I., 

.      197- 

12,   Twelve  Prophets  II.,  280. 

I.  SAMUEL  XV.,  18,  19,  Numbers, 

183. 
22,    Leviticus,    240;   Hebrews, 

177- 

2Tf,  Psalms  II.,  22, 

29,  Jeremiah  I.,  383. 

I.  SAMUEL  XVI.,  5,  Jeremiah  I., 
68. 

I.  SAMUEL  XVII.,  25,  Deuter- 
onomy, 300. 

39,  Romans,  368. 

I.  SAMUEL  XVIIL,  10,  Daniel, 
30. 

19,  Joshua,  293. 

22y  Peter,  135. 

I.  SAMUEL  XIX.,  20-24,  Twelve 
Prophets  I.,  21. 

21-24,  Daniel,  30. 

I.  SAMUEL  XX.,   5,   6,   Numbers, 

351- 

6,  Jeremiah  I.,  121. 

I.   SAMUEL  XXL,   3,  4,    Psalms, 

266. 
I.  SAMUEL  XXIV.,  7,  Isaiah  L, 

131- 

15,  Psalms  I.,  334. 

L  SAMUEL  XXV.,  15,  Jeremiah  I., 

121. 

21,  Jeremiah  I.,  130. 

I.    SAMUEL   XXVI.,    19,   Ezekiel, 

323- 
I.    SAMUEL   XXVII.,    8,   Joshua, 

255- 

I.  SAMUEL  XXVIII.,  7-1 1,  Leviti- 
cus, 411. 

I.  SAMUEL  XXIX.,  4,  Romans, 
141. 

L  SAMUEL  XXX.,  Psalms   I.,  23. 


II 


II 


II, 


II, 


.  SAMUEL  I.,  18,  Numbers,  11 ; 

Joshua,  229, 
—22,.  Proverbs,  239. 
.  SAMUEL  II.,  15,    16,  Joshua, 

319- 
.  SAMUEL  III.,  3,  Joshua,  257. 
—35,  Ezekiel,  210. 
,  SAMUEL  IV.,  6,  I.  Kings,  146. 
,  SAMUEL  v.,  25,  Hebrews,  263. 
,  SAMUEL  VI.,  Psalms  I.,   234. 
—9,  Psalms  HI.,  84. 
—II,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  248. 
—16,  Ecclesiastes,  107. 

SAMUEL  VII.,  Psalms  I.,    12; 

II.,  490. 
—2,  Psalms  HI.,  347. 
—4-17,  Isaiah  I.,  131. 
—5,  6,  Jeremiah  II.,  326. 
-12-16,  I.  Kings,  34,  35. 
—14,  Psalms  IL,  498;  Galatians, 

230. 
-17,  Psalms  II.,  496. 
—28,  29,  Hebrews,  263. 

SAMUEL  VIII.,  I,  12,  Joshua, 

255- 
—2,  6,  Hebrews,  263. 
—3,  Joshua,  257. 
—16,  I.  Kings,  21, 

SAMUEL  XL,  Psalms  IL,  271. 

SAMUEL  XII.,  I,  Twelve  Proph- 
ets I.,  25. 
—14,  Romans,  no. 
SAMUEL  XIII.,  19,  Jeremiah  I., 

105. 
-2,7,  Joshua,  257. 
-39,  I.  Kings,  78. 

SAMUEL  XV.,  25,  Psalms,  26. 
-30,  Jeremiah  I.,  99. 
-2,2y  Jeremiah  I.,  128. 

SAMUEL  XVI.,  8,  Psalms  I., 

25- 


//.  SAMUEL  XVII.—SATAN 


270 


II.  SAMUEL  XVII.,  5.  Jeremiah  I., 

71- 

12.  Psalms  III..   i88. 

13.  Jeremiah  I..  23. 

27.  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  82. 

II.  SAMUEL  XVIII. ,  6,  Psalms  II., 

220. 
II.   SAMUEL  XIX.,   U^   Jeremiah 

I.,  56. 
II.  SAMUEL  XX.,  I,  Ezckiel.  316. 

3,  Jeremiah  I.,  107. 

24,  I.  Kings,  21. 

II.  SAMUEL  XXII.,  1 1,  Psalms  II., 

276. 
II.  SAMUEL  XXIIL,  1-7,  Peter,  31. 

4,  Psalms  II.,  2>^2. 

20,  Isaiah  I.,  211. 

II.  SAMUEL  XXIV.,  24,  Jeremiah 

II.,  312. 

25,  Leviticus,  105. 

SANBALLAT,       The      Horonite, 

Ezra,  236-238,  261,  321. 
SANCTIFICATION,    Use    of    the 

word,   Hebrews,  178. 

what  it  is,  Hebrews,  41. 

See  HOLINESS. 

SANCTUARY,        The,       carefully 

guarded.  Numbers,  43. 

established,  Deuteronomy,32i. 

Ezekiel   and,  Ezekiel.  404-423- 

Iniquity  of.  Numbers,  402. 

Nearness  of.  Psalms  II.,  442. 

Outer,has  ceased,  Hebrews,  1 50, 

sq.,  158. 
Right    of.    Numbers,    402;    I. 

Kings,    186,  187. 
SANHEDRIN,  The,  Acts  I.,    181, 

188,  233,  234. 
SARAH,  wife  of  Abraham,  Gene- 
sis, 100,  sq.,    149,  sq.;   Peter, 
113. 


SARAH,  Death  of,  Genesis,  227. 

jealous  of  Hagar,  Genesis,  214. 

The  laughter  of,  Genesis,  169. 

SARASA,  James,  273. 

SARCASM,  a  species  of  false  wit- 
ness. Exodus,  325. 

SARDIS,  Church  at.  Revelation, 
56-61. 

SAREPTA,    Elijah    at,    I.    Kings, 

SARPI,  Paolo,  Romans,  100. 
SARGON,  Isaiah  I.,   3^    M^,    169, 

198. 

and  Judah,  II.  Kings,  320. 

captures    Samaria,   II.    Kings, 

240-243. 
defeats  Merodach-Baladan,  II. 

Kings,  323. 

Inscription  of,  II.  Kings,  490. 

replaces     the     population    of 

Samaria.  II.  Kings,  254. 
SARUM  OFFICE,  James,  342. 
SATAN,   as  an  angel  of  light,  II. 

Corinthians,  Ty^t'^. 

as  tempter,  Hebrews,  72. 

Atonement  not  given  to,  He- 
brews, 43. 

challenged.  Job,  40. 

Deliverance    from,   Colossians, 

61. 
Delivering       unto.       Pastoral 

Epistles,   74. 

Destruction  of,  Hebrews,  42. 

disappears.  Job,  71. 

his  (}uestion.  Job,  42. 

in  Chronicles,  270-298. 

Judgment  of.  Revelation,  335- 

359- 

qA  Dante,  Job,  35. 

of  Job,  Job,  34-49.  68-74. 

of  Milton,  Job,  35. 


280 


SA  TAN—SCEVA  'S  SONS 


SATAN,  Paul's  view  of,  Ephesians, 

SAUL,  jealous  of  David,  L  Samuel, 

399-404. 

292-299. 

Personality  of,  Pastoral  Epis- 

 mutilation  of  his  body,  L  Sam- 

tles, 77-80;  James,  150,  240. 

uel,  436. 

Power    and    limits  of,  James, 

The  people  delighted  with,   L 

238-244. 

Samuel,  176. 

Power  of.  Job,  :^6. 

relieves  Jabesh-Gilead,  L  Sam- 

 The  scape-goat  sent  to,  Leviti- 

uel, 169-180. 

cus,  270. 

Review  of  the  life  of,  IL  Sam- 

 The  serpent  not  symbolical  of. 

uel,  393-395- 

Genesis,  16. 

slays  Abimelech,  L  Samuel,  346. 

tempts    Christ,    Matthew,   39- 

Wilfulness  of,   I.   Samuel,  229- 

47- 

240. 

SAUL,    among    the   prophets,    L 

SAVINGS    BANKS,  Acts  I.,   204, 

Samuel,  153. 

205. 

and  Samuel  at  Gilgal,  L  Sam- 

SAVANAROLLA    persecuted,     I. 

uel,  204,  248. 

Kings,  422. 

anointed  by  Samuel,  I.   Sam- 

SAXONS justified  in  raiding  Brit- 

uel, 145-156. 

ain,  Judges,  7. 

at  Endor,  L  Samuel,  404-415. 

SAYCE,  A.  H.,  Psalms  III.,   190, 

brought  to  Samuel,  L  Samuel, 

295;  Isaiah  I.,  411;  II. ,    165, 

121-132. 

i79>  457;  Jeremiah  II. ,   206, 

Character  of,  L  Samuel,  439. 

259;   Daniel,   56,   58,  60,    61, 

chosen    king,  L   Samuel,    157- 

172;  Twelve  Prophets  II. ,  19, 

168. 

524- 

a  coward,  L  Samuel,  431. 

on  cities  of  Canaan  destroyed, 

David   harper    to,    L  Samuel, 

Numbers,  183. 

267. 

on  the  origin  of  the  Sabbath, 

David  spares  the  life  of,  L  Sam- 

Numbers, 346. 

uel,  3^6-2,77- 

on  Pethor,  Numbers,  262, 

David's  lament  for,  IL  Samuel, 

SCANDAL,    The   Greek  word  for, 

I-I3- 

John  Epistles,  131. 

Death  of,  L  Samuel,  429-440. 

in  the  church,  IL  Corinthians, 

efforts  against  David,  I.  Sam- 

81. 

uel,  305-316. 

SCAPE-GOAT,      The,      Leviticus, 

Final  rejection  of,   L   Samuel, 

264-274. 

241-252. 

SCEPTICISM,  Job,  41, 140;  Isaiah 

. First  meeting  of  Samuel  and, 

I.,  15,  16. 

L  Samuel,  133-144. 

materialistic,          Ecclesiastes, 

First  offence    of,     L    Samuel, 

171-173. 

212. 

SCEVA'S  SONS,  Acts  IL,  355' 

SCHAFF— SEEKING  A  SIGN 


281 


SCHAFF,  Philip,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 395;  James,  32,  399. 

SCHLEIERMACHKR,  F.  E.,  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  T?i. 

SCHMIDT,  P.,  Thessalonians,  43, 
142. 

SCHMIEDEL,  Paul  WillKlni,  II. 
Corinthians,  13,  65,  163,  177, 
179,  182,  213,  218,  250,  253, 
267,  304,  311,  345,  374. 

SCHOOLS  OF  THE  PROPHETS. 
David  a  member?  I.  Samuel, 
271. 

SCHOPENHAUER,  Arthur,  Job, 
Tfj,  39;  Ecclesiastes,  4. 

SCHOTT,  Heinrich  August, 
James,  407,  418. 

SCILLITAN  MARTYRS,  Acts  I., 

15- 

SCHRADER,  Eberhard,  Isaiah  I., 
308,  309,  321;  Daniel,  49,  53, 
55,  Tj,  129,  146,  170;  Twelve 
Prophets  I.,  172,  174;  II.,  176, 
216. 

SCHULTZ,  Hermann,  Isaiah  I., 
137;  II.,  262,  400;  Twelve 
Prophets  I.,  99. 

SChUrER,  Emil,  Daniel,  76,  291; 
Twelve  Prophets  I.,  409;  Acts 
II.,  25,  431;  James,   50,   423, 

424»  439- 
SCIENTIFIC  KNOWLEDGE,  and 

the  church,  Deuteronomy,  216. 
cultivating   self-interest,    E.xo- 

dus,  317. 
its  lack  does  not  disqualify  the 

teacher  of  truth,  Genesis,  4. 
not  a  necessity  for  the  teacher 

of  truth,  Genesis,  5. 
not    a    possession    of   ancient 

times,  Genesis,  2. 


SCIENTIFIC  KNOWLEDGE,  not 

a  revelation.  Proverbs,  380. 
not  sufficient,  Jeremiah  I.,  326, 

327- 

tells  us  what  wc  must  believe. 

Judges,  111-114. 

SCORNER,  The,  Proverbs,  125, 
129. 

SCOTT,  Thomas,  Romans,  324; 
Hebrews,  248. 

SCOTT,  Sir  Walter,  Jeremiah  II., 
47,  167;  John  Epistles,  95. 

SCRIBISM,  Ezra,  iii. 

SCRIPTURE,  to  be  used  in  temp- 
tation, Matthew,  46. 

SCRIPTURE  AND  SCIENCE  at 
variance.  Genesis,  4. 

SCRIVENER,  F.  H.  A.,  John  Epis- 
tles, vii. 

SCYTHIANS,  The,  II  Kings,  378; 
Jeremiah  I.,  12-14;  Ezekiel,  4-6; 
Twelve  Prophets  II.,  15. 

as  the  scourge  of  God,  Jere- 
miah I.,  134-148. 

SEALED,  The,  Revelation,  114- 
124. 

SECOND  ADVENT,  The,  Mat- 
thew, 340-349;  Acts  I.,  33-41; 
Philippians,  303-310;  Thessa- 
lonians, 60,  184-198. 

Duty     and,       Romans,      361- 

368. 

Nearness  of,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

Z7^,  428. 

SECOND  BIRTH,  The,  John  I., 
105-116. 

SECTARIANISM,  Folly  of,  I.  Cor- 
inthians, 94. 

SEEKING  A  SIGN,  Genesis,  135, 
246;  Exodus,  120;  Mark,  209, 
210;  John  I.,  165,  2yy. 


282 


SEER—SERVANT  OF  GOD,   OF  ISRAEL 


SEER,  The  term,  II.  Kings,   201; 

Twelve  Prophets,  17. 
SELAH,  Psalms  I.,  25. 
SELDEN,  John,  De  Synedriis,  Acts 

I.,  181,  278,  295. 
SELEUCID  KINGS,  Daniel,  241. 
SELF-CONTROL  necessary,   Deu- 
teronomy, 197. 
SE-LF-DECEPTION,    II.    Samuel, 

176. 
SELF-KNOWLEDGE,      Song     of 

Solomon,  2TiT^. 
SELF-SACRIFICE,  Genesis,    119, 

207;  Judges,  249,  331,  Z2>2>- 

of  Joshua,  Joshua,  323. 

understood    by    God,   Genesis, 

209. 
SELF-SURRENDER,         Romans, 

168,  169,  2>ZZ- 
SELFISHNESS,  Matthew,  yy. 

and  its  reward,  I.  Samuel,  384. 

bhnd.  Proverbs,  297. 

killed    by  love,   Deuteronomy, 

142. 
not     the     aim     of    existence. 

Judges,  136,  137. 
not   Christian,    Deuteronomy, 

199. 

powerful,  I.  Samuel,  191. 

refined,  Ecclesiastes,  250. 

slaying,  Colossians,  271-289. 

to  be  resisted,  Philippians,  107, 

111-113. 
SEMITES,  Primitive  religion  of  the. 

Job,  180. 
SENIOR,  The  title,  Acts  II.,  417. 
SENNACHERIB,  II.   Kings,  324; 

Psalms  II.,  80,  2>y,   149,  359, 

367;  Isaiah  I.,  209,  302,  308- 

315.  355-362. 
and  Judea,  II.  Kings,  325. 


SENNACHERIB,     his    defeat    at 

Jerusalem,  II.  Kings,  331-350. 
Inscriptions  of,  II.  Kings,  490- 

492. 
SENSUAL,   Meaning    in    the    New 

Testament,  James,  200,  453. 
SEPHARAD,  Twelve  Prophets  II., 

176. 
SEPTIMIUS     SEVERUS,    James, 

21,  330. 
SEPTUAGINT,  Hebrews,  35,  139, 

309- 

SERAIAH,  The  scribe,  II.  Samuel, 
128. 

SERBONIAN  BOG,  Isaiah  I., 
361. 

SERGIUS  PAULUS,  Acts  II.,  201- 
206. 

SERMON  ON  THE  MOUNT,  and 
the  law,  Exodus,  2^t^. 

Gospel  of  the  kingdom,  Mat- 
thew, 57-104;  Luke,  241-254. 

Secret  of  the,  Proverbs,  359. 

SERPENT,  the  agent  of  Eve's 
temptation,  Genesis,  15. 

Fiery,  Numbers,  246. 

not  symbolical  of  Satan,  Gene- 
sis, 16. 

Temptation  comes  like  a  ser- 
pent, Genesis,  20. 

SERVANT  OF  GOD,  OF  ISRAEL, 
as  prophet  and  martyr,  Isaiah 

11.,  313. 

as  realized  by  one  man,  Isaiah 

II.,  276. 

Chief  end,  Isaiah  II.,  317. 

fulfilled  by  Christ,  Isaiah  II., 

267,  281,  sq.,  367. 

an  individual's  objections  an- 
swered, Isaiah  II.,  270,  272, 
274.  405. 


SERVANT  OF  GOD,  OF  ISAIAH— SHEBA 


283 


SFRVANT  OF  GOD.  OF  ISAIAH, 
Deuteronomy,  X09;  Job,  15; 
Isaiah  II.,  2J3-280. 

as  a  nation.   Isaiah   II.,    :rjO, 

256. 

as  a  part  of  a  nation,  Isaiah 

II.,  257- 
Christ's  relation  to,  Isaiah  II., 

142. 
God's  commission  of,  Isaiah  II., 

132. 

his  character,  Isaiah  II.,  254. 

in  the  New  Testament,  Isaiah 

II.,  278-289. 

Passages  on,  Isaiah  II.,  233. 

SERVANTS,  Indebted  to,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 128. 
Master    and,    Ephesians,   390- 

393;  Colossians,  345-353. 

Treatment  of,  Proverbs,  387. 

SERVICE,  Age  of.  Numbers,  23. 

Christian,  Peter,  95-107. 

theend  of  individuality,  Judges, 

30. 

Equipment  for.  Judges,  184. 

for    God's    glory,    Peter,    163- 

176. 
the  highest         distinction, 

Joshua,  42,  43. 
of  God  and   man,   Isaiah    II., 

290-312. 
of  the  unmarried,  I.  Corinthi- 
ans, 168,   169. 

Public,  II.  Samuel,  226. 

SETH,  Family  of,  Genesis,  51. 
SEVEN,    Bowls,   Revelation,   259- 

276. 
heads  of  the  beast.  Revelation, 

283-286. 
Importance     of    the    number, 

Revelation,  28,  29. 


SEVEN,  Trumpets,  Revelation, 
132-156,   1 89  195. 

SEVEN  CHURCHES,  The,  Exo- 
diis,  384;  Number,  82. 

Epistle  to.  Revelation,  21  (^4. 

—Salutation   to.  Revelation,  5. 

SEVENTY  WEEKS  of  Daniel,  Dan- 
iel, 268-291. 

SHADOW  of  turning,  James,  98. 

SHADRACH,  MESHACH  AND 
ABEDNEGO,  Daniel,  167-183. 

SHALLUM,  King  of  Israel,  II. 
Kings,  218. 

SHAKESPEARE,  William,quoted, 
Proverbs,  -jt^,  86,  234,  241; 
Ecclesiastes,  176,  177,  213, 
248;  Isaiah  I.,  53,  56;  Jere- 
miah I.,  288;  Daniel,  139; 
Mark,  143;  John  II.,  68;  Ephe- 
sians, 247;  John  Epistles,  95, 
130,  176. 

SHALMANESER  II.,  Inscriptions 
of,  II.  Kings,  489. 

Jehu  and,  II.  Kings,  143-145, 

SHALMANESER  IV.,  Ecclesiastes, 

35- 

and  Samaria,  II.  Kings,  279. 

SHAME,  as  the  result  of  sin.  Gene- 
sis, 23,  24. 

God  relieves  man's.  Genesis,  26. 

Sin    and,    Song   of  Solomon, 

324-334. 
SHAMELESSNESS      in      serving 

God,  Pastoral  Epistles,  370. 
SHAMGAR,  Judges,  ^2>,  89. 
SHEBA,  Queen  of,  and  Solomon, 

I.  Kings,  227. 
SHEBA,  Son  of  David,  defeated, 

ir.  Samuel,  322. 
Insurrection  of,  II.  Samuel,  314- 

325. 


284 


SHEBNA  —SILENCE 


SHEBNA,  Isaiah  I.,  317. 

SHILOH  destroyed,  I.  Samuel,  7^- 

SHECANIAH,  Ezra,  143-146. 

Elkanah's  offering  at,  I.  Sam- 

SHECHEM, Judges,  210. 

uel,  22. 

becomes  the  capital  of  Israel, 

Promise  of  the,  Hebrews,  249. 

I.  Kings,  340-342. 

The     Tabernacle    erected    at. 

Jacob  in,  Genesis,  313-315- 

Joshua,  312-315. 

Joshua  and  Israel  at,  Joshua, 

The  word.  Genesis,  433. 

?,?^?>- 

SHIMEI,  begs  pardon,  II.  Samuel, 

SHECHINAH,  Numbers,  89. 

296. 

SHELLEY,  Percy  Bysshe,  quoted. 

Character  of,  I.  Kings,  99-100. 

Song  of  Solomon,   ?>?,\   Peter, 

denounces  the  polity  of  David, 

10. 

II.  Samuel,  244. 

Skylark  quoted,  Song  of  Solo- 

SHISHAK,    King    of    Egypt,    I. 

mon,  21,  295,  296. 

Kings,   315;  Chronicles,  324. 

SHEMAIAH,  The  prophet,  Ezra, 

SHITTIM,  Israel  at,  Joshua,  96. 

265-268;  Jeremiah  II.,  138. 

SHORTHAND,  Ancient  use  of,  Acts 

SHEOL,  Life  in,  Job,  183. 

I.,  108,  312. 

No  hope  in,  Job,  211. 

SHRINE-MAKERS,  Ephesian,Acts 

No  penalty  in,  Job,  255. 

H.,  369. 

Redemption  from,  Psalms  II., 

SHUNEM,  Elisha  at,  II.  Kings,  43. 

no. 

SHUR,    The    wilderness.    Exodus, 

Semitic  conception  of,  Isaiah  I., 

225-231. 

411. 

SHUSHAN  GATE,  Acts  I.,  158. 

SHEPHERD  LIFE,  Genesis,  46;  I. 

SIBYL,  Fable  of  the,  Hebrews,  59. 

Samuel,  273. 

SIBYLLINE    ORACLES,    James, 

and  the  good  shepherd,  Psalms 

51- 

I.,  227-232;  John  I.,  319-334; 

SICARII,  James,  221. 

Peter,  201-210. 

SICK,  The,  Anointing  of,  James, 

and  kings,  Jeremiah  II.,  100- 

326-331- 

I02,  324. 

SIDON,  Ezekiel,  259-261. 

SHEPHERD  OF  HERMAS,  Acts 

Church  at.  Acts  II.,  461. 

I.,    97,    382;  II.   Corinthians, 

Paul  at,  Acts  II.,  461. 

52- 

SIFTING,  Psalms  I.,  8. 

SHEPHERDS,  Adoration  of  the. 

SIHON,    The   Amorite,    Numbers, 

Luke,  67-79. 

254;  Deuteronomy,  57. 

SHEW-BREAD,     Leviticus,     477- 

SILAS,  Acts  II.,  257,  325;  Peter, 

479- 

229. 

SHIBBOLETHS,      Judges,     254- 

SILENCE,  and  speech,  Isaiah  IL, 

265. 

322. 

SHIGGAION,  Psalms  I.,  58. 

Argument  from.  Acts  IL,  342, 

SHILOAH,  Isaiah  L,  122. 

361,  393. 

SILENCE— SIN 


285 


SILENCE,  under  surtcring,  Isaiah 

II.,  360. 
SILOAM        INSCRIPTION,      II. 

Kings,  493. 
SIMEON,     Son     of    Jacob,     and 

Jacob's  blessing,  Genesis,  429. 
and  the  Schechemites,  Genesis, 

314- 

SIMEON.  The  tribe.  Numbers.  330. 

SIMEON,  of  the  New  Testament, 
nunc  dimmittis,  Luke,  44-46. 

SIMON  OF  CYRENE,  Matthew, 
422;  Mark,  426. 

SIMON  THE  SORCERER,  Mag- 
nus, and  the  gift  of  the  Holy 
Ghost,  II.  Samuel,  5 ;  Acts  I., 

357,  385-397- 
SIMON  THE  TANNER,  Acts  II., 

119. 
SIMONY,  Acts  I.,  394. 
SIN,  Isaiah  I.,  52,  69,  255. 
against  love.  Twelve  Prophets 

I-,  346-354- 
All    unrighteousness    is,    John 

Epistles,  260-273. 

and  the  law,  Isaiah  II.,  ^^S. 

and  shame,  Song  of  Solomon, 

324-334- 

and  sickness,  Peter,  loi. 

and  suffering,  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 108-119. 

begets  sin,  I.  Samuel,  434. 

Besetting,  Hebrews,  277. 

borne  by  God,  Isaiah  II.,  177- 

i88. 

borne  by  Jeremiah  and  Ezekiel, 

Isaiah  II,,  352. 

borne  by  the  servant,   Isaiah 

n.,  336-374- 

the  cause  ofail  trouble,  Joshua, 

169. 


SIN,  causes  despair.  Genesis,  ^?,. 

Christ  incapable  of,  Hebrews, 

72. 

Confession  of,  James,  335-343. 

Continuance  in,  not  a  necessity, 

Genesis,  ;^y. 

Covering,  Joshua,  192. 

a  curse,  Joshua,  170,  187, 188, 

iSy;  II.  Samuel,  325. 

Death  the  curse  of.  Genesis,  2S. 

Death  the  punishment  of.  Gene- 
sis, 25 ;  Joshua,  261. 

Delight    in    the   discussion   of. 

Genesis,  78. 

Deliverance  from,  Luke,  146. 

a  departing  from  God,  I.  Sam- 
uel, 410. 

Does  it  bring  suffering?  Job, 

157- 

effect  on  man's  material  circum- 
stance, Isaiah  I.,  416-427. 

The    essential    demerit    of,    I. 

Samuel,  115. 

Eternal,  Mark,  95-99. 

ever  seducive,  Genesis,  y6. 

Ezekiel  conception  of,  Ezekiel, 

139- 

Fearlessness    in    attacking,    1. 

Samuel,  291. 

Forgiveness    of,    Genesis,    44; 

Matthew,  95-99. 

God    and.    Song   of  Solomon, 

218  229. 

gradual    in    its    approach,    I. 

Samuel,  391;  Psalms  I.,  3. 

Grounds  of  forgiveness,  Isaiah 

IL,  79- 

Its  effects,  Isaiah  II.,  387 ;  John 

I.,  i86. 

Its     nature.     Proverbs,    363, 

367- 


286 


SIN—SLA  VER  V 


SIN,  Its  punishment,  Isaiah  II.,  29, 

SIN,  A  way  back  to  God  from  all, 

465- 

Genesis,  26. 

Its  results.   Proverbs,   71,  74, 

Ways  and  issues  of.  Proverbs, 

lOI. 

65,  78. 

Its  seductions.  Proverbs,  68. 

We    can    rise    above    it    only 

Kinds  of,  Psalms  I.,  193. 

through  God,  Genesis,  26. 

Leprosy  the  type  of,  Leviticus, 

SIN-OFFERING,     Exodus,     412, 

336. 

413;  Leviticus,  109-154;  Num- 

 Man    of,    Thessalonians,    305- 

bers,  349;  Hebrews,  322. 

322. 

for  a  Nazirite,  Numbers,  64. 

Method    of    judging,    Joshua, 

a  he-goat.  Numbers,  354. 

175- 

not  for  moral  guilt,  Numbers, 

Nemesis  of,  I.  Kings,  63,  118. 

65. 

not    as    sudden    as    it    seems. 

SINAI,   Elijah   at,   I.   Kings,   426- 

Genesis,  35. 

430. 

not  confined  to  the  sinner.  Gen- 

 Israel    at,    Exodus,     270-279; 

esis,  25. 

Numbers,  383;  Hebrews,  297. 

of     scant     measure,     Twelve 

SINAITICUS,    Codex,    James,    5, 

Prophets  I.,  426-434. 

403- 

One  taste  ruins.  Genesis,  2;^. 

SINCERITY,      Philippians,      34; 

Origin  of.  Genesis,  17. 

Pastoral  Epistles,  397-405- 

Pain  and,  Job,  56. 

of  mind,  Job,  169. 

Past,  Colossians,  282-284. 

SINGON  STREET,  Acts  II.,  157. 

pertains    to    being,    Leviticus, 

SINGULARITY,  I.  Samuel,  118. 

310. 

SINIM,     Land      of,     Isaiah      IL, 

Shame  the  first   result.   Gene- 

383. 

sis,  23,  24. 

SINUESSA,    Council  of.   Acts  II., 

Source  of  Israel's,   Psalms  I., 

144. 

393- 

SISERA,  Judges,  101-105. 

Subtle,  Numbers,  247. 

''SIX    HUNDRED    AND    SIXTY- 

the  supreme  apostasy.  Chron- 

SIX," Revelation,  235. 

icles,  357. 

SKELLIGS,  Acts  II.,  88. 

to    be   cultivated    out    of  the 

SLANDER     forbidden,    Leviticus, 

world,  Genesis,  31. 

400. 

to  be  fought  on  the  knees,  I. 

Warning    against,  Thessaloni- 

Samuel, 97. 

ans,  79,  80. 

unto  death,  John  Epistles,  254- 

SLAVERY,       Pastoral      Epistles, 

259- 

175-184,     248-250,    253-257; 

Wages     of,    I.    Samuel,     172; 

Peter,  96-99. 

Psalms  I.,  66;  II.,   10;  Prov- 

 and    Christianity,  Colossians, 

erbs,  36. 

459-468. 

SLA  VER  y—SOCINUS 


287 


SLAVERY,  and  the  spirit  of  Christ. 
DcuteroMoiny,  215. 

Efl'ects  of,  Exodus,  94. 

Hebrew',  Exodus,  339;  Deuter- 
onomy, 394,  424-429. 

The     Jubilee    and,     Leviticus, 

497-501. 

Overthrow         of       American, 

Chronicles.  344;  Song  of  Solo 
mon,  2>ic>- 

Paul     and,     Colossians,     34S 

350. 

Pagan,  Arts  L,   5S;   IL,  314; 

Ephesians,  3CS7-390. 

SLAVES,  Manumission  of.  Pas- 
toral Epistles,  181,  184,  248. 

SLOTHFULNESS,  Judges,  296; 
John  Epistles,  257. 

SLUGGARD,  The,  Proverbs,  ?>2- 
84,  263. 

SMEND,  Rudolf,  quoted,  Ezekiel, 
191,  276,  410,  412,  466,476, 
493 ;  Daniel,  67 ;  Twelve  Proph- 
ets IL,  292,  506. 

SMITH,  James,  Voyage  of  St. 
Paul,  Acts  IL,  459. 

SMITH,  VV.  Robertson,  Expansion 
of  law  of  covenant,  Deuter- 
onomy, 60. 

. on  criticism  and  faith,  Deuter- 
onomy, 34. 

on  the  sanctity  of  the  first- 
born. Numbers,   t^j. 

quoted.  Job,  43;  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 14;  Isaiah  L,  126,  137, 
169,  200;  IL,  23,  215,  248; 
Ezekiel,  85,  Ti22,  390,  402, 
436,  462,  464,  477,  484;  Dan- 
iel, 48;  Twelve  Prophets  L,  20, 
38,  109,  136,    171,    172,   203, 

205,    218,    22i%,   2-]2,   311,  316, 


381;  IL,  42,  49,  226,  237, 
3">,  2>2^^^  335.  U7^  339.  357. 
376,  380,  386,  419,  506. 

SMITH.  W.,  Dictio7iary  of  Chris- 
tian A  nliquities.  Acts  I.,  144; 
IL  ,176;  Pastoral  Epistles, 
249. 

SMITH,  W.,  Dictionary  of  Chris- 
tian Biography,  Acts  L,  xi,  2, 
16,  25,  32,  65,  79,  112,  120, 
125,  157,  239,  257,  259,  270, 
274,  342;  II. ,  6,   14,  259,  2-JT,, 

344.  353.  Z(^7y  434- 

SMITH,  W.,  Dictionary  of  Greek 
and  Roman  Geography,  Acts 
I.,  412. 

SMYRNA,  The  church  at.  Revela- 
tion, 46-49. 

SOBRIETY  in  religion.  Pastoral 
Epistles,  241,  245;  Peter,  42- 
44,  165,  166. 

SOCIAL  DISORDER,  Numbers, 
165;  Deuteronomy,  419,  420; 
Job,  331. 

SOCIALISM,  Proverbs,  137,  147, 
395;  Isaiah  II. ,  296;  Jeremiah 
II. ,  280;  Mark,  280;  I.  Corin- 
thians, 393;  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 185-187. 

and  faith,  Deuteronomy,  207, 

208. 

Christian,  Acts  I.,  206. 

has  no  Biblical  sanction,  Exo- 
dus, 243. 

SOCIETY,  compared  to  the  body, 
I.  Corinthians,  283. 

Composition  of.  Genesis,  113. 

Evils  of,  condemned,  Colos- 
sians, 276-278. 

Life  in,  John  Epistles,   146. 

SOCINUS,  Faustus,  Hebrews,  169. 


288 


SOCRA  TES—SONG  OF  SOLOMON 


SOCRATES,     Ecclesiastes,     299; 

SOLOMON,   Harem  of,    I.    Kings, 

Isaiah  I.,   260;   Hebrews,   t6\ 

245-249. 

James,  340. 

Hollow  prosperity  of,  I.  Kings, 

SODOM,  Genesis,  115,131;  Ezekiel, 

230-238. 

136,  137- 

in  all  his  glory,  I.  Kings,  222- 

Abraham  intercedes  for.  Gene- 

229. 

sis,  172-185. 

Judgment  of,  I.  Kings,  127. 

ripe   for  punishment,   Genesis, 

Last  days  of,  I.   Kings,   250- 

191. 

265. 

visited  by  angels,  Genesis,  176, 

Legend    of  the    death    of,    I. 

186. 

Kings,  262. 

SOLDIERS,   as  a  type    of   Chris- 

 not  the  author  of  all  the  Prov- 

tians,  Pastoral  Epistles,  344- 

erbs,  Proverbs,  2,  106. 

350. 

not  the  author  of  Ecclesiastes, 

— -religion,  Joshua,  403. 

Ecclesiastes,  7-20. 

SOLIDARITY      OF     MANKIND, 

Old    age   of,   I.     Kings,    239- 

Joshua,    172;  Ephesians,  312- 

249. 

318. 

Rehoboam  succeeds,  I.  Kings, 

of       Christendom,       Pastoral 

269. 

Epistles,  86. 

Reign  of.  Chronicles,  169-197. 

SOLITARINESS,  John  II.,  237. 

Wisdom  of  the  boy    King,    I. 

SOLOMON,  and  the  authorship  of 

Kings,  120-133. 

the  Song  of  Solomon,  Song  of 

"^av,"  Psalms  I.,  21. 

Solomon,  4,  11. 

SON  OF  MAN,  Mark,  52-56. 

and  Elijah  compared,  I.  Kings, 

Coming  of  the,  Matthew,  340- 

497-499. 

349- 

and    the   Queen    of  Sheba,    I. 

Sin  against,  Hebrews,  95. 

Kings,  227. 

"SONG  OF  THE  BOW,"  Joshua, 

and  the  succession,  I.  Kings,  87. 

229;  II.  Samuel,  7-13. 

and  the  Temple,  I.  Kings,  149- 

SONG    OF  DEBORAH,  Numbers, 

171. 

2,?^y,  Judges,  106-134;  Chroni- 

 Anointing  of,  I.  Kings,  89. 

cles,  349;  Psalms  II.,  275. 

Beginning  of  the  reign  of,    I. 

SONG   OF   THE   LAMB,  Revela- 

Kings, 105-119. 

tion,  261. 

the  charge  of  Nathan,  I.  Kings, 

SONG  OF  MOSES,  Exodus,  216- 

^2>- 

225;    Deuteronomy,  452-260; 

Choice  of,  I.  Kings,  124. 

Joshua,  411. 

Commerce    of,  I.   Kings,   224, 

SONG  OF  SOLOMON,  and  Abishag, 

233- 

I.  Kings,  109. 

Court    and    Kingdom    of,    I. 

Canonicity    of,  Song  of  Solo- 

Kings,  134-148. 

mon,  53-62. 

SONG  OF  SOLOMON— STAINS 


289 


SONG  OF  SOLOMON,  Mystical 
interpretation  of,  Song  of 
Solomon,  41-52. 

Origin,  I.  Kings,  279. 

Structure  of,  Song  of  Solomon, 

3  14- 

SONG  OF  SOLOMON  VIII..  3, 
Revelation,  115. 

SONG  OF  THE  THREE  CHIL- 
DREN, Daniel,  180. 

"SONG  OF  THE  WELL,"  Num- 
bers, 252. 

SONSHIP,  and  the  servile  spirit, 
Genesis,  22^. 

of  Christ  defined,  Hebrews,  29). 

a  revelation  of  God,  Hebrews, 

12. 

SOOTHSAYING,  Chaldean,  Num- 
bers, 263. 

SOPHOCLES,  Ecclesiastes,  151. 

SORCERY,  Law  of,  Exodus,  349- 

353- 
SORROW,  a  help  to  the  pilgrimage, 

Psalms  II.,  446. 

Man's  abuse  of,  Isaiah  I.,   54. 

not     peculiar    to    Christians, 

Philippians,  253. 
not  to  be  continually  indulged. 

Genesis,  228. 
SOSIPATROS,  Acts  II.,  199. 
SOSTHENES,  I.  Corinthians,  19. 
SOUL,   The  word,   Thessalonians, 

254- 

SOUL-LIFE,  Proverbs,  191-202. 

SOUTH,  Robert,  John  Epistles, 
182. 

SOVEREIGNTY  OF  GOD,  Gene- 
sis, 106;  Romans,  252-260. 

SOWING  AND  REAPING,  Gala- 
tians,  405-418;  Thessalonians, 
142-147. 


SOZOMEN,  James,  340. 

SPEECH,  Silence  and,  Isaiah  II., 
3,22-327. 

SPENCER,  Herlurl.  Philosophy 
of.  Job,  52;  Proverbs,  380. 

SPENSER,  Edmund,  Deuter- 
onomy, 189;  Song  of  Solomon, 
330. 

SPERATUS,  St.,  Acts  I.,  15. 

SPIES,  The,  despatched,  Num- 
bers, 151. 

Doom  of    the    ten.    Numbers, 

173- 

Evil  report  of.  Numbers,  158. 

in  Jerico,  Joshua,  82-94. 

SPIRIT,   and  body.  Exodus,  105. 

Endowment  of  the,  Numbers, 

130. 

of  the  Lord  and  Saul,  I,  Sam- 
uel, 174. 

SPIRITUAL,  and  sensual.  Song  of 
Solomon,  52. 

thirst,  John  L,  254. 

SPIRITUALISM,  Leviticus,  411; 
Hebrews,  11. 

SPIRITUALITY,  Numbers,  296. 

and  profession.  Genesis,  35. 

SPON  AND  WHEELER,  Acts  IL, 
312. 

SPRINGS,  mentioned  in  the  Bible, 
Peter,  313-315- 

STADE,  Bernhard,  Ezekiel,  318, 
410;  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  6, 
468. 

STANDARDS,  Numbers,  27. 

STANLEY,  Dean  A.  P.,  Act's  L, 
354;  IL,  57'  301. 

STANTON,  V.  H.,  Isaiah  I.,  143; 
Thessalonians,  295;  James, 
412,  439. 

STARS,   Wandering,  James,  432. 


290 


STA  TISTICS— SUFFERING 


STATISTICS  in  Chronicles, 
Chronicles,  64-71. 

STEADFASTNESS,  Undaunted 
and  united,  Philippians,  77- 
94;  Peter,  365-374- 

STEALING  forbidden,  Exodus, 
321-324. 

STEPHANAS,  Acts  II.,  2>2e. 

STEPHEN,  and  the  ministry,  Acts 
I.,  268-292. 

defence  and  doctrine  of  inspira- 
tion. Acts  I.,  293-321. 

the  first  martyr.  Acts  I.,  322- 

345- 
Martyrdom    of.    Acts   I.,   248- 

251. 

refers  to  Moses,  Exodus,  jt^. 

reproaches  the  Jews,  Hebrews, 

23- 

STERNHOLD  AND  HOPKINS, 
Psalms,  Acts  I.,  381. 

STEWARDSHIP,  Leviticus,  396. 

and    service,   Colossians,    124- 

125. 

STEWART,  Canon  Dale,  Revela- 
tion, 356. 

STIER,    Rudolf,   James,    t,2,    199, 

297'  325.  2>?y?i>  399- 

STILLINGFLEET,  Edward,  Acts 
I.,  134,  137. 

STOICISM,   James,  66,  133,  3i5- 

STONES  erected  at  the  Jordan, 
Joshua,  115,  116. 

STORMS,  of  more  than  ordinary 
import,  Judges,  no. 

their  influence  in  history.  Exo- 
dus, 153. 

Thunder,   Psalms  I.,  171-175, 

273-279. 

STRABO,  Acts  II.,  199,  204. 

STRAIGHT  STREET,  Acts  II.,  52. 


"STRANGE  FIRE,"  of  Nadab  and 
Abihu,  Leviticus,  237-255; 
Numbers,  31. 

STRANGERS,  Rights  of,  Exodus, 
353-357;  Numbers,  182;  Deu- 
teronomy, 293,  294,  393,  394. 

STRAUSS,  David  F.,  I.  Corinthi- 
ans, 335 ;  Pastoral  Epistles,  -jy ; 
James,  381 ;  John  Epistles,  45. 

STRENGTH  and  weakness,  II.  Cor- 
inthians, 342-358. 

Spiritual,  Ephesians,  186-188. 

STUDENTS,  Kinds  of,  Ecclesias- 
tes,  276. 

SUAREZ,  James,  322. 

SUBMISSION  and  penitence 
James,  238,  246. 

of    David,    II.    Samuel,    251; 

Psalms  II.,  9. 

SUCCESS,  depends  largely  upon 
foresight.  Genesis,  90. 

Indifferent    ones    desire    to   be 

considered  as  having.  Judges, 
189. 

Paul's  ideal  of,  Philippians,  61. 

Sanctified,  Judges,  80. 

SUCCOTH  and  Gideon,  Judges, 
190. 

SUETONIUS,  Acts  II.,  163,  273, 
323,  327;  Romans,  13. 

SUFFERING,  and  consolation,  II. 
Corinthians,  10-22. 

and  glory,  Thessalonians,  2S9- 

304- 

and  thanksgiving,  Thessaloni- 
ans, 228. 

as  discipline.  Job,  59;  Psalms 

II.,  2. 

Door  of  hope  through.  Job,  68. 

for  itself  not  an  end.  Judges, 

333- 


SUPFE/^IA'C—S  YRIA  C  VERSION 


2J)1 


SUFFERING,  for  well  doing,  Peter. 

133-148. 

The  lessons  of.  Peter,  149-162. 

of  the    good,    Thessalonians, 

1 12. 
Sin    and.     Song    of   Solomon. 

loS-i  19. 
Use  of,  Job.  61;  John  I..  306, 

\'icarious,  Isaiah  II.,  64,  272, 

331,  355-358.  422. 
SUICIDE,  I.  Samuel,  432-434. 
Job  does  not  think  of,  Job,  97, 

124. 
SUMPTUARY    LAWS,    Folly    of, 

Deuteronomy,   188. 
SUN     AND     MOON     STANDING 

STILL,  Joshua,  230-233. 
SUN-WORSHIP,  Ezekiel,  86. 
SUNDAY   SCHOOL  TEACHERS, 

Acts  I.,  1 86. 
SUPEREROGATION,       Leviticus, 

552- 
SUPERNATURAL,  Accepting  the 

I.  Kings.  366;  John  I.,  22^2. 

erected  in  nature,  Hebrews,  64 

in  the  scriptures,  Joshua,  71. 

SUPERSTITION  and  heresy,  Pas 

toral  Epistles,  384. 
SURETY   for    another,   Proverbs 

79-82. 
SUSA,  Ezra,  165-167;  Daniel,  253 


SWEARING,  forbidden,  Exodus, 
302-305;  James,  302-308. 

Habit  of,  II.  Kings,  59. 

SWEATING  SYSTEM,  Proverbs, 
3I1  296. 

SYCOMORE,  The.  Twelve  Proph- 
ets, yy. 

SYMBOLISM,  Christian.  Num- 
bers.  193. 

of  Candelabrum,  Numbers.  79. 

of  the  cloud,  Numbers,  93. 

of  the  life  of  David,  I.  Samuel, 

261. 

of   Old    Testament    sacrifices, 

Deuteronomy,  268. 

of  Revelation.  Revelation,  35, 

of  the  Sabbath,  Numbers.  191. 

SYMPATHY,  for  the  oppressed, 
Ecclesiastes,  149. 

in  all  relations  of  life,  Deuter- 
onomy, 432. 

Longing  for.  Proverbs,  196. 

Money  and,  John  I.,  16. 

of  Job's  friends.  Job.  80. 

wanting  to  the  angels.  Hebrews, 

74- 
with     Christianit}'.    Numbers, 

H2. 

SYNAGOGUE,    Christian,    James, 

19,  118,  126. 
SYRIAC  VERSION,  James,  8,  21, 

26,  30,  12,7,  368. 


292     TAANACH— TEACHING  OF  TWELVE  APOSTLES 


TAANACH,  Joshua,  303. 
TABERAH,  Numbers,  120. 
TABERNACLE,      The,     Exodus, 

375-400. 
Consecration  of,  Exodus,  409- 

416;  Leviticus,  204. 

Curtains  of.  Exodus,  390. 

Description  of,  Hebrews,  150. 

Entrance  to.  Exodus,  394. 

• Erected  at  Shiloh,  Joshua,  312- 

315- 
Inauguration  of  the  service  of, 

Leviticus,  219-236. 
• Incense    in  the.  Exodus,  417- 

419. 
Its    structure.    Exodus,    389- 

394- 
New  Covenant  symbolized  in, 

Hebrews,  149-158. 
Outer  court  of,   Exodus,  395- 

399- 

The    pattern    in    the   mount. 

Exodus,  385-388. 

Purification  of,  Hebrews,  163. 

^worship,  Leviticus,  29-236. 

TABERNACLES,  Feast  of,  Leviti- 
cus, 464-467;  Numbers,  369; 
Revelation,  125-127. 

TABLE  OF  SHEWBREAD,  Exo- 
dus, 381,  2^^2. 

TACITUS,  Jeremiah  II.,  218;  Acts 
I.,  58,  130;  IL,  352,  2><^y, 
Romans,  13;  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 179. 

TALE-BEARING,  Proverbs,  168, 
169. 


TALENTS,  Parable  of  the,  Mat- 
thew, 357-365- 

TALKATIVENESS,  Perils  of, 
James,  186. 

TALMUD,  The,  quoted,  Ecclesias- 
tes,  195,  247,  276,  314;  Acts 
I.,  175;  II.,  13,  16;  John  Epis- 
tles, 292. 

TAMAR,  Amnon  and,  II.  Samuel, 
197. 

TAMMUZ,  Ezekiel,  85,  ^6. 

TANNING,  Acts  IL,  120. 

TANTALUS,  Hebrews,  221. 

TARSUS,  Acts  IL,  1-12. 

TASSELS,  memorial,  Numbers, 
192. 

TATE  AND  BRADY,  Psalms,  Acts 
L,  381. 

TATIAN,  Diatessaron,  Acts  I.,  vii, 
65,  400,  415,  419. 

rejects  the  Epistles  to  Timothy, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  8,  202. 

TATTENAI,  The  satrap,  Ezra,  84, 
99. 

TAYLOR,  Jeremy,  Acts  I.,  89;  IL, 
29,  267,  334;  James,  332. 

TEACHERS,  in  the  church,  He- 
brews, 84. 

Responsibilities       of,      James, 

165-170. 

TEACHING  OF  THE 
TWEL  VE  APOSTLES,  Acts 
L,  97>  139,  sq.,  149,  2>77\  H., 
34,  345 ;  Pastoral  Epistles, 
69,  96,  108,  115;  Hebrews, 
84. 


TEA  CITING—  TER  TULLIAN 


203 


TEACHING,      by      Anarhr».nisn.. 

TEMPLE,  tribute,  Matthew,  250, 

Chronicles.   1 1 1 . 

^5'- 

by  Types,  Chronicles,  125-132. 

vessels  restored  by  Cyrus,  Ezra, 

The  term    used    by,    John    I., 

JJ35- 

2>^7- 

worsliip,     I.    Kings,     193-201; 

Two  final  tests  of  false,  Colos- 

Chronicles,  97. 

sians,  242-256. 

TEMPLE,  Rev.  Frederick,  James, 

TEARS,  of  Christ,  John  I.,  358. 

189,  190. 

Significance  of.  Genesis,  397. 

TEMPTATION,     Numbers,    371; 

TEKOA,  Men  of,   refuse  to  work. 

John  Epistles,  140-143. 

Ezra,  220. 

and  safeguards,  Proverbs,  Gy- 

TELEMACHUS,  Acts  I.,  56. 

71- 

TEMAN,  Job,  15. 

and  the  will.  Judges,  2%^. 

TEMPER,    Bad,    Proverbs,    203, 

comes  like  a  serpent,  Genesis, 

207;  James,  190. 

20. 

TEMPERANCE,    Proverbs,    280, 

from  within  more  serious.  Gen- 

286; I.  Corinthians,  217;  Gala- 

esis,  76. 

tians,  387;  Peter,  247,  248. 

Joy  in,  James,  62-67. 

TEMPLE,  Numbers,  75;  I.  Kings, 

of  Christ,   Deuteronomy,  205, 

149-171. 

206;    Matthew,    39-47;  Luke, 

cleansed    by    Christ,    John   I., 

105-127;  Hebrews,  J2. 

85-98. 

Overcoming,  Peter,  180-182. 

Dedication  of  the  rebuilt,  Ezra, 

Process  of,  Judges,  317. 

96-106. 

Small  ones  often  more  effectual, 

Defilement    of  the,    I.    Kings, 

Genesis,  76. 

219,    221. 

Source  of,  James,  89-92. 

Haggai    and    the  building  of, 

Strength  and,  Isaiah  I.,  264. 

Twelve  Prophets  II.,  234-252. 

succeeds  by  exciting  curiosity, 

Measuring  the,  of  Heaven,  Rev- 

Genesis, 20,  21. 

elation,  168-175. 

Unexpected,  John  II.,  286. 

of  Ezekiel,  Ezekiel,  392. 

TENNYSON,   Alfred,  quoted.  Job, 

of  Heaven,    Revelation,     170, 

164;   Proverbs,   6^  \  Ecclesias- 

171. 

tes,  124;  Song  of  Solomon,  80, 

partially   restored,  II.   Kings, 

170;  Jeremiah  II.,  168;  Twelve 

154-158;  Chronicles,  404,  428. 

Prophets  I.,  252. 

proposed  by  David,  II.  Sam- 

TERAH, Genesis,  84,  sq. 

uel,  97-108. 

TESTAMENT  OF  THE  TWELVE 

rebuilt,  Ezra,  48-59. 

PATRIARCHS,    James,    249, 

sacrifices,   I.  Kings,  194-221. 

4-37- 

Significance    of  the,   I.   Kings, 

TERTULLIAN,    Acts   I.,   yj,   56, 

172-176. 

109,    121,    3S1,   3S2,  384,415; 

294 


TESTS— I.    THESSALONIANS  II. 


II.,  Ti6,  50,  122-124,  195.  400, 

THEODORE  OF  MOPSEUESTIA, 

445;  Pastoral  Epistles,  6,  10, 

Acts  II.,  84. 

89,    90,    98,    101,    128,     166, 

THEODORE  OF  TARSUS,  James, 

227,  294,  295,  300,339^346; 

331- 

Hebrews,  264;  James,  ^t^,  307, 

THEODORET,    Acts   I.,    57;    H., 

330,    2>2,7.     342,     368,     441; 

84;  John  Epistles,  51. 

Peter,  vi;    John   Epistles,   91, 

THEODOSI  AN  CODE,  Acts  I.,  348 ; 

163. 

II.,  370. 

TESTS  of  the  kingdom  of  Heaven, 

^'THEOLOGIA  GERMANICA^ 

I.  Samuel,  154. 

Song  of  Solomon,  343. 

TEXIER,  on  Galatia,  Acts  II.,  266. 

THEOLOGY,  Hebrews,  88,  sq. 

THACKERAY,    VV.  M.,  Ecclesias- 

and  letters.  Job,  4. 

tes,  31. 

New  beginning  in,  Job,  15. 

THANKFULNESS,      Psalms     I., 

of   Paul,    Thessalonians,   341- 

184,  282;  II.,  17;  Colossians, 

358. 

52;  Hebrews,  309. 

THEOPHILUS,  Acts  II.,  30,  2,2\ 

THANK-OFFERING,       Leviticus, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  6;  Peter,  v, 

104. 

xii. 

THANKSGIVING,    David's    song 

THEOPHYLACT,  Acts  L,  81. 

of,  II.  Samuel,  350-362. 

THEOSOPHY,  Job,  39. 

a   duty,    Thessalonians,    225- 

THESSALONIANS,  The  first  epis- 

230. 

tle.    Conclusion    of,    Thessalo- 

 for  all  men,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

nians,  251-265. 

92. 

The  first  New  Testament  writ- 

 of  I.    Thessalonians,    Thessa- 

ing, Thessalonians,  6. 

lonians,  21-36. 

The  thanksgiving  of,  Thessalo- 

 of  11.   Thessalonians,    Thessa- 

nians, 21-36. 

lonians,  271-288. 

To  whom  written,  Thessaloni- 

THANKSGIVING  DAY   and    the 

ans,  3-20. 

feast  of  Tabernacles,  Leviticus, 

I.    THESSALONIANS    I.,    5,    H. 

466. 

Corinthians,    231;    Galatians, 

THEBEZ,     Abimelech    killed    at, 

274;  Peter,  58. 

Judges,  222. 

6,  II.  Corinthians,  264;  Gala- 

THEFT, Ephesians,  295. 

tians,  177;  Ephesians,  419. 

THEOCRACY,  for  Israel,  Judges, 

7-9,  Ephesians,  6y. 

46. 

8-10,  Romans,  24,  346. 

The  ideal,  Ezekiel,  381-499. 

I.  THESSALONIANS  II.,  2,  Ephe- 

 Jonathan's    idea    of.    Judges, 

sians,  430. 

214,  218. 

3,  Daniel,  102. 

not  hierocracy.  Numbers,  6. 

—    4,  Pastoral  Epistles,  52. 

sustained,  Numbers,  319. 

5,  Galatians,  88. 

/.    THESSA  L  ON  I  A  NS  11.  —II.    T HESS  A  L  ON  I  A  NS  II.     295 

I.  THESSALONIANS  II.,  6,  Gala- 

I.  THESSALONIANS  v.,  12,  Acts 

lians.  12,  13;  Kphesians,  239; 

II.,  416. 

James,  Z7i- 

14,  Ephesians,  385. 

7,  8,  Galatians,  274,  281. 

15,  Ephesians,  293. 

.12,  Colossians,  43. 

17,  Acts  II.,  324. 

13,  Ephesians,  56. 

18,  Ephesians,  348. 

14,  II.  Corinthians,  264. 

19,  Ephesians,  298. 

16,  Galatians,  298. 

25,  Ephesians,  428. 

17,  Galatians,  394. 

26,  Peter,  231. 

18,    Song   of  Solomon,    220; 

27,  Colossians,  407. 

Pastoral  Epistles,  78. 

THESSALONIANS,           SECOND 

19,  II.  Corinthians,  33. 

EPISTLE,  and  the  second  ad- 

I.THESS.ALONIANSIII., 5,  Peter, 

vent.  Acts  I.,  36-3S. 

225. 

Farewell      of,     Thessalonians, 

I.  THESSALONIANS  IV.,    i,  Ro- 

391-404. 

mans,    204,    i2T,;   Philippians, 

salvation    and    thanksgiving. 

30. 

Thessalonians,  271-288. 

1-8,  Galatians,  365. 

II.    THESSALONIANS    I.,   4,    6, 

3,  Ephesians,  340,  365. 

Galatians,  177;  Ephesians,^67, 

5,  Ephesians,  269. 

179. 

II,  12,  Pastoral  Epistles,  348. 

5,  7,  Galatians,  30. 

13,    Leviticus,    409;    Ezekiel, 

6,   Romans,   292;  Philippians, 

349;  Romans,  29. 

90;  Revelation,  226. 

14,  II.  Corinthians,  79;  Gala- 

 7,  Romans,  385;  Galatians,  57; 

tians,  156. 

Revelation,  226,  346. 

15,   Romans,  362;  Ephesians, 

7,  8,  Romans,  41. 

411;    Pastoral  Epistles,  428; 

8,     Ephesians,     269;      Peter, 

James,  279. 

340. 

16,  Mark,  7,7,2, ;  Revelation,  205, 

9,  Psalms,  206;  Peter,  341. 

346. 

10,  Revelation,  346. 

17,    Romans,   314;   II.   Corin- 

II.THESSALONIANS II.,  i,  Levit- 

thians,  347;   Revelation,  160, 

icus,  514. 

346. 

2,       Romans,      363;       Peter, 

L THESSALONIANS  V.,  i,  Daniel, 

165. 

151- 

y&,  Leviticus,  127,  444;  Gala- 

 2,  Peter,  165,  t,t,o,  356. 

tians,  150;  Ephesians,  412. 

8,  Ephesians,  410,  415. 

3-10,  Mark,  97;  Pastoral  Epis- 

 8,  9,  Ephesians,  61;  Pastoral 

tles,  376. 

Epistles,  344. 

6,  7,  Revelation,  215. 

9,  Ephesians,  60. 

7,  Pastoral  Epistles,  133;  Rev- 

 10,  H.  Corinthians,  179. 

elation,  297. 

296 


//.    THESSALONIANSII.—L    TIMOTHY  I. 


II.  THESSALONIANS  II.,  8,  12, 
Ephesians,  54,  420;  Pastoral 
Epistles,  404;  Revelation,  237. 

9,  10,  Ephesians,  400;  Revela- 
tion, 229. 

II,  Ephesians,  292. 

14,  Ephesians,  60. 

15,  Acts  I.,  383. 

II.  THESSALONIANS  III.,  i ,  Ephe- 
sians, 428. 

3,  5,  Ephesians,  115. 

5,  Galatians,  384. 

9,  Acts  I.,  383;  Peter,  208. 

II.  THESSALONIANS  III.,  10,  12, 
Matthew,  358. 

II,  Peter,  190. 

16,  Ephesians,  435. 

17,  18,  Galatians,  422;  Colos- 

sians,  410. 

THESSALONICA,  Acts  II.,  294- 
300. 

Church    at,  Thessalonians,   3- 

20. 

Paul  at.  Acts  I.,  T^y. 

THOMAS,  St.,  Mark,  87. 

Acts  of.  Acts  I.,  2. 

Test  of,  John  II.,  363-379- 

THOMSON,  William,  on  leprosy, 
Leviticus,  T^T^y. 

on  locusts,  Twelve  Prophets  II., 

401. 

on    the  Pelican,    Psalms    III., 

91. 

THOUGHTLESSNESS  and  its  re- 
sults. Genesis,  42, 

THYATIRA,  Church  of,  Revela- 
tion, 53-56. 

TIBERIUS,  Emperor,  Pastoral 
Epistles,  425. 

TIGELLINUS,  Pastoral  Epistles, 
275- 


TIGLATH-PILESER  I.,  aids 
Ahaz,  II.  Kings,  22yO-22iy, 
Isaiah  I.,  96,  103. 

TIGLATH-PILESER  II.,  II. 
Kings,  277,  489,  490. 

TIME,  Brevity  of,  Joshua,  401. 

Ideas  of  the  passage  of,  Luke, 

15- 

measurement,  II.  Kings,  312. 

On    the    Horizon    of,    Twelve 

Prophets  I.,  400-407. 

TIMNAH,  Judges,  282,  sq.,  288. 

TIMOTHY,  Acts  II.,  325-347; 
Philippians,  157-170;  Thessa- 
lonians, 7,  118-121;  Hebrews, 

329- 

and  circumcision,  Acts  II.,  22-j. 

at  Corinth,  Pastoral  Epistles, 

2T,,  24,  29. 
compared  with  John,  Pastoral 

Epistles,  19-21. 
compared  with  Titus,  Pastoral 

Epistles,  209. 

Family  of.  Acts  II.,  8,  9. 

Martyrdom  of.  Acts  II.,  263. 

Ordination  of,  Acts  II.,  261. 

I.    TIMOTHY    I.,    I,   Philippians, 

330;  John  Epistles,  291. 

2,  Peter,  231. 

3.  Acts  I.,  196;  II.,  412;  John 

Epistles,  43. 
4,  Galatians,  442;  Ephesians, 

45;  Peter,  xiv,  262. 

5,  Peter,  249. 

6,  Exodus,  410;  Peter,  315. 

8,  12,  Romans,  35. 

9,  Galatians,  149,  215;  Ephe- 
sians, 289. 

II,  Galatians,  94,  152. 

13,  Acts  II.,  26\  Galatians,  66, 

76,  121 ;  James,  126. 


/.    TIMOTHY  I.—IL    TIMOTHY  II. 


297 


I. 

TIMOTHY  I.,  15,  Acts  II.,  28; 

I.  TIMOTHY  v.,  6  II,  John  Epis- 

Galatians. 74. 

tles,  286. 

— 16,  Galatians,  69;  Peter,  367. 

10,  Hebrews,  316. 

I. 

TIMOTHY  I..  17,  Romans,  281 ; 

12,  James,  i68. 

Ephesians,  217. 

13,         Thessalonians,        379; 

— 18,  Exodus,  410;  Acts  II.,  262. 

James,  156;  Peter,  190. 

— 

— 19,  Galatians,  309. 

17,  Ephesians,  239. 

I. 

TIMOTHY  II.,  1-7,  Ephesians, 

18,  Twelve  Prophets  I.,  288. 

58. 

19,  II.  Corinthians,  2f7i- 

—4,  Peter,  27,^. 

I.  TIMOTHY  VI.,  I,  Peter,  96. 

— 5,  Galatians,    157,   218,   220; 

2,  Peter,  98. 

Ephesians,  217. 

3-10,  Peter,  2R7. 

— 6,  7,  Galatians,  1 20 ;  Ephesians, 

5,  Peter,  xiv. 

45- 

10,  Philippians,  281. 

— 7,  Ephesians,  164. 

12,  Acts  II.,  262;  Philippians, 

fi   Acts  I     18 1  •  Enhesians  280 

265. 
15,  16,  Ephesians,  217. 

_ 

—12,  13,  Leviticus,  324. 

— 13-15,  Galatians,  364. 

17,  Luke,  238. 

— 14,  Galatians,  393. 

18,  James,  81. 

— 15,  Leviticus,  324, 

19,  Romans,  278. 

I. 

TIMOTHY  HI.,  2,  Hebrews,  316. 

20,  Peter,  2t^9,;  John  Epistles, 

— 3,  Peter,  207. 

43- 

— 6,  James,  168;  Peter,  289. 

II.   TIMOTHY  I.,   2,   Peter,   231; 

— 13,  Galatians,  229. 

John  Epistles,  291. 

— 14,  Acts  I.,  196;  II.,  412. 

4,  Romans,  2j. 

— 

— 15,  16,  Ephesians,  10. 

5,  Exodus,  410;  Acts  II.,  9. 

— 16,  Matthew,  2)77;  Acts  L.  44; 

6,  Acts  I.,  284;  Acts  II.,  263. 

Galatians,      250;     Ephesians, 

7-12,  Ephesians,  431. 

346,  347;  Revelation,  S,t,. 

8,  Galatians,  177. 

I. 

TIMOTHY    IV.,    I,   Ephesians, 

911,  Ephesians,  45,  61,  109. 

412;  Thessalonians,  309. 

10,   Romans,    143;  Ephesians, 

— 2,  Ephesians,  292. 

439- 

—3,  James,  84. 

12,   Romans,   368;  Ephesians, 

— 7,  Peter,  xiv,  262. 

115- 

— 10,  Peter,   196. 

13,  Galatians,  229. 

—  12,  Peter,  208. 

15,  Acts  II.,  420. 

— 13,  Acts  I.,  196. 

18,  Acts  I.,  196;  II.,  412. 

— 14,  Acts  II.,  262. 

11.    TIMOTHY  II.,    I,   Ephesians, 

I. 

TIMOTHY  v.,  3,   5,   10,  John 

398. 

Epistles,  285. 

2,  Acts  II.,  262. 

— 5,  John  Epistles,  19. 

3-10,  Ephesians,  431. 

298 


//.    TIMOTHY  I L  — TITUS  II. 


II.  TIMOTHY  II.,  8,  Romans, 
1 6. 

9,  Peter,  58. 

-10,  Galatians,  172;  Ephesians, 

6i,  246. 

11-13,    Ephesians,    217,    346; 

Peter,  316. 

15,  Peter,  173. 

16,  Isaiah  II.,  169. 

17,  i8,  Acts  II,,  420. 

19,  Galatians,  334;  Ephesians, 

52,  54;  Peter,  226;  Revela- 
tion, 115. 

20,  21,  Galatians,  10. 

24,  Isaiah  II.,  2^^. 

25,  Ephesians,  385;  Peter,  238. 

26,  Ephesians,  400. 

II.  TIMOTHY  III.,  I,  Ephesians, 
412;  James,  279,  446. 

3,  Ephesians,  289. 

4,  Proverbs,  286. 

5,  Romans,  68. 

7,  Peter,  155,  238. 

10,  James,  292. 

II,  Galatians,  17. 

13,  Leviticus,  339. 

14,  15,  Acts  II.,  9;  Ephesians, 

385. 

15,  Galatians,  229. 

16,  Ephesians,  146. 

II.  TIMOTHY  IV.,  3,  Jeremiah  II., 

27. 

4,  Peter,  262. 

5,  Ephesians,  239;  Peter,  43. 

7,  Galatians,  449. 

8,  Galatians,  30;  James,  89. 

9-12,  Ephesians,  433. 

10,      Ephesians,      58;    Philip- 

pians,  162,  165. 

13,  John  Epistles,  21. 

16,  17,  Mark,  433. 


II.  TIMOTHY  IV.,  17,  Ephesians, 
57,   398,  428, 
429. 

18,  Ephesians,  61,  115. 

TIRHAKAH  and  Sennacherib,  II. 
Kings,  2,2,^. 

TIRZAH,  Song  of  Solomon,  12. 

TISCHENDORF,  Constantino, 
Acts  I.,  79;  II.  Corinthians, 
346,  369;  James,  7;  John 
Epistles,  vii,  91,  123,  163,  171. 

TITHE,  Law  of  the,  Leviticus, 
559-566;  Numbers,  215. 

Repentance  by.  Twelve  Proph- 
ets II.,  367. 

TITUS  and  Paul,  Galatians,  102- 
112. 

and  Timothy,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 209. 

at    Corinth,    II.    Corinthians, 

275-277;      Pastoral    Epistles, 
204-206. 

exhortation   to   aged   men,  II. 

Samuel,  312. 

in  Dalmatia,  Pastoral  Epis- 
tles, 410. 

TITUS  I.,  4,  Galatians,  103;  Ephe- 
sians, 249. 

7,  Peter,  207. 

8,  Ephesians,  289. 

9,  John  Epistles,  293. 

II,  Peter,  xiv,  207. 

12,  James,  156. 

14,  Peter,  263. 

16,  Ephesians,  2'j6. 

TITUS  II.,  3-5,  Ephesians,  363. 

4,  5,  Isaiah  I.,  266. 

7,  Ephesians,  440;  Peter,  209. 

9,    10,   Ephesians,  389;  Peter, 

96. 

10,  Thessalonians,  2^62. 


TITUS  II.—  TRIDENTINE  COUNCIL 


2on 


TITL'S  II.,  II,  Galatians,  74,  149; 
I'.phesians,  58. 

12-14,  Galatians,  1S5. 

13,  Romans,  261,  262. 

TITL'S  III.,  2,  Romans,  87. 

4,  John  Epistles,  290. 

4-7,  Galatians,  149,  22,2. 

5,  Leviticus,  190,  215;  Gala- 
tians,    173;     Ephesians,     61, 

371- 
7,  Galatians,  151;  Ephesians, 

TOBIAH,  Ezra,  270,  342. 
TOBIT,  James,  281,  295. 
TOI,  King  of  Hamath,   sends   an 
embassy  to  David,  II.  Samuel, 

115- 

TOLERATION,  and  comprehen- 
sion, Ezra,  68,  69. 

and  duty,  Romans,  ^TAt-2i^7. 

The   lesson    of,   Exodus,    loi ; 

Judges,  124. 

True  and  false,  I.  Kings,  248. 

TONGUE,  Defilement  of  the,  James, 
174-178. 

Importance    of    the.     Exodus, 

Moral  contradiction  in  the  reck- 
less use  of  the,  James,  179- 
190. 

Powers    of  the,    James,    169- 

174. 

Sinsof  the,  Psalm  I.,  iii,  137; 

II.,  144;  Proverbs,  163-178; 
Ephesians,  296-298;  Colos- 
sians,  288;  Peter,  63. 

TORAH,  The,  Song  of  Solomon, 
145,  146. 

TOTAL  DEPRAVITY,  Job,  195. 

TOULOUSE,  Council  of,  James, 
341. 


TOZER.  II.  F.,  Ilii^rhlamis  of  Tur- 
key, Acts  II.,  294,  300,  303. 

TRADITION,  Jesus  Christ  and, 
Mark,  1 84- 189. 

an  unpopular  word,  Thcssalo- 

nians,  350. 

TRADUCIANISM,  Hebrews,  222. 

TRAJAN,  Acts  II.,  28. 

TRANSGRESSORS,  High  handed, 
Numbers,   185. 

TRANSFIGURATION  OF 
CHRIST,  Matthew,  233242; 
Mark,  228-235;  Luke,  190- 
192,  281-293. 

TRANSLATION  OF  ENOCH,  Gen- 
esis, 53. 

TREE  OF  LIFE,  The,  Genesis,  18; 
Psalm  I.,  4. 

TREFFRY,  Richard,  On  the  Eter- 
nal Sonship,  John  I.,  346. 

TREGELLES,  Samuel  P.,  II.  Cor- 
inthians, 346;  James,  4,  7, 

TRENCH,  Archbishop  R.  C,  Acts 
I.,  47,  405;  II.,  159;  Romans, 
Tyi-];  Galatians,  143;  Ephe- 
sians, 303;  Thessalonians, 
187;  James,  120;  John  Epis- 
tles, 105,  192;  Revelation,  32, 
361. 

TRENT,  Council  of,  James,  341, 

Anathemas  of,  Galatians,  46, 

47- 
TRESPASS,  Leviticus,  154. 

Atonement  for,  Numbers,  55. 

Forgiveness  of,  Matthew,  258- 

266. 
TRIALS,  I.  Samuel,  276. 
TRIBES,  The,  in  camp.  Numbers, 

27.- 
TRIDENTINE     COUNCIL,     Acts 

II.,  23S. 


300 


TRINIT V—  T YPICA L  SIGNIFICANCE 


TRINITY,  The,  Hebrews,  13. 

TRUTH,     revealed    gradually    to 

in  man's  election,   and  salva- 

men. Genesis,  6. 

tion,  Peter,  3  16. 

rules  the  world,  Deuteronomy, 

TROAS,  Paul  at.  Acts,  268,   392- 

231. 

406;  II.  Corinthians,  84-86. 

will  prevail,  I.  Kings,  441. 

TROPHIMUS,     Colossians,     T,yy, 

TUBAL-CAIN,  Genesis,  47. 

Pastoral    Epistles,    414,    415, 

TUBERCULOSIS       and      cattle. 

419. 

Leviticus,  297. 

TROUBLE,  WTierefore?  Job,  282. 

TURNING  POINTS  IN  LIE?:,  Gen- 

TRULLO,   Council    of.     Pastoral 

esis,  247;  Joshua,  299;  Judges, 

Epistles,  115. 

105. 

TRUMPETS,    at    festivals.    Num- 

 Effects  of.  Genesis,  304. 

bers,  1 00,  355. 

Jacob's,  Genesis,  301. 

Feast  of,  Leviticus,  461,  462. 

hinge  on  trivial  incidents,  John 

First  six,  of  John,  Revelation, 

I-,  135. 

132-156. 

must  come,  Judges,  375. 

in  war  time.  Numbers,  99, 

TWILIGHT,  Genesis,  250. 

The  seventh.  Revelation,  189- 

TYCHICUS,       Ephesians,       431; 

195- 

Colossians,  371-382;  Pastoral 

signalled    the    advance.    Num- 

Epistles, 410,  411. 

bers,  97. 

TYNDALE,       Ecclesiastes,      303; 

Silver,  Numbers,  95. 

Pastoral    Epistles,    412,  413; 

TRUST  in  God,  Psalms  IL,   183; 

James,  200,  222. 

III.,  T^y ;  Ecclesiastes,  185 ;  Jere- 

TYNDALE,   Professor,    on    crea- 

miah   I.,   63,   354;  Galatians, 

tion,  Genesis,  9. 

386. 

on    religious    sentiment,    Exo- 

TRUTH, Ephesians,  2>^9-2>2>2>- 

dus,  287. 

Ascertainment    of,    I.     Kings, 

TYPES,  Teaching  by,  Chronicles, 

9- 

125-132. 

Children  unable  to  understand 

TYPICAL  SIGNIFICANCE,  of  the 

it  all.  Genesis,  7. 

burnt       offering,        Leviticus, 

Christian  conduct  the  issue  of. 

56,   sq. 

Romans,  321-335- 

of  the  Exodus,   Exodus,   264- 

an  essential  attribute  of  God, 

269. 

Genesis,  102. 

of    feasts    of    seven    months. 

finally    triumphs,    I.     Samuel, 

Leviticus,  468-473. 

207. 

of  garments    of  high  priests. 

Jesus  Christ  the,  John  I.,  124- 

Leviticus,  199. 

128. 

of    the    Jubilee    and    Sabbath 

- — not  discovered  in  a  day,  Gene- 

year, Leviticus,  510-518. 

sis,  159. 

of  the  law,  Hebrews,  163. 

TYPICA  L  SIGNIFICANCE—  T  YRE 


301 


TYPICAL  SIGNIFICANCE,  of 
the  peace  offering,  Leviticus, 
84. 

of  the  priesthood  and  taber- 
nacle, Leviticus,  184. 

TYRANNY,  Cultured,  Exodus, 
18. 

has  its  succession,  Psalms  III., 

42. 


TYRANNY  is  suicide.  Twelve 
Prophets  II.,    143  148. 

without     relief,      Ecclesiastes, 

149. 

TYRANNUS,  Acts  II.,  347. 

TYRE,  Isaiah  I.,  288-300;  Ezekiel, 
230-259;  Twelve  Prophets  I., 
127,  128;  Acts  II.,  268,  392- 
406. 


302 


UEBERWEG,  F.—  UZZIAH 


u 


UEBERWEG,  F.,  Isaiah  II.,  125, 
126. 

UHLHORN,  Gerhard,  Christian 
charity  in  the  ancient  church, 
Hebrews,  316. 

UNBELIEF,  Doom  of,  Numbers, 
167- 

in  God's  goodness,  Genesis,  23, 

of  the  cities,  in  Christ,  Mat- 
thew, 149,  150. 

of  the  Jews,  John  I.,  203. 

UNCTION,  See  EXTREME  UNC- 
TION. 

UNCLEANNESS,  and  lascivious- 
ness,  Galatians,  365-366. 

by   the    dead.    Numbers,     52, 

220. 

Defilement  by  animals  and  dead 

bodies,  Leviticus,  277-304; 
Deuteronomy,  290,  291. 

disregarded.  Chronicles,  435. 

Ideas  of.  Numbers,  46. 

of  childbearing,  Leviticus,  313- 

326. 

of  issues,  Leviticus,  305-312. 

of    Leprosy,     Leviticus,     2^2^- 

366;  Numbers,  48. 

Real,  Mark,  190-194. 

UNEXPECTED  OCCURRENCES, 
I.  Samuel,  280. 

UNITY  OF  CHRISTIANS,  Num- 
bers, 97;  John  II.,  256;  Ephe- 
sians,      218-226;     Colossians, 


303,  304,  408;  Thessalonians, 
201 ;  Hebrews,  41, 

UNIVERSALISM  of  Christ  and 
Paul,  Hebrews,  141. 

UNLEAVENED  BREAD,  Feast  of, 
Numbers,  351. 

of  the  passover,  Exodus,  186. 

UNRECORDED  SAYINGS  OF 
CHRIST,  James,  56,  89,  249, 
362. 

UNSEEN,  Sustained  by  the.  Exo- 
dus, 41. 

THE  UNSEEN  UNIVERSE, 
Acts  I.,  47. 

UR  OF  THE  CHALDEES,  Gene- 
sis,   ?>Ti,    84. 

URIAH,  The  Hittite,  David  and,  I. 

Samuel,     303;      II.      Samuel, 

158-168. 
URIM  AND  THUMMIM,  Leviticus, 

196;  Numbers,  341;  I.  Kings, 

122;  Ezra,  45-47. 
USSHER,  Archbishop  James,  Acts 

II.,  318,  362;  Ephesians,  15. 
USURY,  Ezra,  247-258;  Psalms  I., 

138. 
UTTERANCE,  The  gift  of,  I.  Cor- 
inthians, 26-28. 
UZ,  Job,  19. 

UZZAH,  Death  of,  II.  Samuel,  88. 
UZZIAH,     See    AZARIAH,    King 

of  Israel. 
Isaiah  I.,  20,  59,  sq.,  98. 


VAHEB  IN  SUPHAH—VOCA  TION  OF  CHRISTIAN    SaS 


VAHEB    IN  SUPHAH,   Numbers, 

251. 
VALENS,  Emperor,  Acts  II.,  352. 
VALESIUS,  Acts  II.,  439. 
VANITY,  Feeding  of,  Ecclesiastes, 

190,  214. 

of  Absalom,  II.  Samuel,  25S. 

of  Haman,  Ezra,   Tf-j2-2-j'8i. 

Use  and  abuse  of  the  sense  of, 

John  Epistles,  149-163. 
VALLEY  OF  DRY  BONES,  Eze- 

kiel,  342-355- 
"  VAS  ELECTIONISr  Acts  II., 

64-  65. 
VASHTI,  Ezra,  352,  361-370. 
VATICAN  COUNCIL,  Acts  I.,  265; 

II.,  238. 
VAUGHAN,  C.  J..  Acts    I..    226, 

317;  Revelation,  107,  258. 
VEIL,  Paul  on  the  use  of  the,  I. 

Corinthians,  241-257. 
VENGEANCE,  Desire  for,  Joshua, 

oftheCovenant,  Leviticus,  522- 

533- 
of  God,   Twelve   Prophets   II., 

90-95- 
VENI  CREATOR  SPIRITUS,  The 

hymn,  Isaiah  I.,  186. 
VESPASIAN,    Emperor,   Acts   II., 

460. 
VIATICUM,  James,  z:s2. 
VIBIUS      SALUTARIUS,     Gaius, 

Acts  II.,  370,  371. 
VICES,      Discarded,      Ephesians, 

290-304. 


VICTOR  I..  Pope,  Acts  I.,  14. 

VICTORIA,  Queen,  Joshua,  80. 

VICTORY,  Birth  and,  John  Epis- 
tles, 223-235. 

The  pause  of.  Revelation,  316 

326. 

Through  perils  to,  Peter,  223 

235- 

VINCENTIAN  RULE,  Acts  II., 
100. 

VINE  AND  THE  BRANCHES,  The, 
John  II.,  173-190. 

VINEYARD,  Parable  of  the,  He 
brews,  31. 

VIRGIL,  Acts  II.,  70;  Ephesians, 
127. 

VIRGINITY  OF  MARY,  Per- 
petual, James,  31. 

VIRTUE,  Peter,  246,  247. 

Safety  of.  Numbers,  279. 

VISION,  and  action,  Jeremiah  I., 
69. 

of  Eliphaz,  Job,  io6. 

of  the  glory  of  God,   Ezekiel, 

26-41. 

VISIONS,  Consolatory,  Revela- 
tion, 111-156. 

First  consolatory.  Revelation, 

157-167. 

Renewed  consolatory,  Revela- 
tion, 238-258. 

Second  consolatory.  Revela- 
tion, 168-195. 

VITELLIUS,  Acts  II.,  30,  2>2>. 

VOCATION  OF  THE  CHRIS- 
TIAN, Numbers,  123. 


304 


VOICE—  VO  WS 


VOICE,    The   human,    in    Isaiah, 

VON  SODEN,   E.,   Ephesians,    11, 

xl  Ixvi,      Isaiah       II.,       302, 

17- 

406. 

VOWS,      Concerning,      Leviticus, 

VOLTAIRE,  John  Epistles,  158. 

541-566;  Numbers,  344,  361. 

Maria  Theresa  of,  John  Epis- 

 of  women.  Numbers,  362. 

tles,  96. 

Thank    offerings    and,    Leviti- 

 on     Pascal,    II.    Corinthians, 

cus,  104. 

147. 

Unfulfilled,  Genesis,  313. 

WAGES—  VVELLHA  USEN 


305 


w 


WAGES,  Leviticus,  39S. 
WAITING,  Song  of  Solomon,  206- 

217. 
WALDSTEIN,  C,  Acts  II.,  ^72. 
WALKING    WITH  GOD,  Genesis, 

51-53- 

WANT,  Labour  principally  to  sat- 
isfy physical,  Genesis,  t^q. 

WAR,     Exodus,     254,     Isaiah   I., 

51- 

Causes  of,  Chronicles,  83. 

Civil,  Judges,  257. 

Jesus  Christ  and,  Deuter- 
onomy, 215. 

Methods  of,  I.  Samuel,  450. 

not  Christ-like,  Joshua,  413. 

Paul  on,  II.  Corinthians,  289- 

299. 

Prayer  in,  Jeremiah  I.,  396. 

Ruthlessness  of,  Joshua,  197. 

a  sad  necessity.  Judges,  11. 

settled  by  champions,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 28. 

Spiritual,  Joshua,  234,  235. 

Strategem  in,  Joshua,  196. 

"WARS  OF  JEHOVAH,"  Book  of 
the.  Numbers,  251;  Deuter- 
onomy, II. 

"WATCH  AND  PRAY,"  Genesis, 

77- 
WATCHFULNESS  enforced,Mark, 

357- 

of  Nehemiah,  Ezra,  243,  244. 

WATER,  fails.  Numbers,  224. 
of  Jordan    divided,     Joshua, 

108. 


WATERLAND,  Daniel,  I.  Corin- 
thians, 268,  269;  Pastoral 
Epistles,  293,  306. 

WATSON,  Richard,  Acts  I.,  3. 

WAVE  OFFERING,  Leviticus, 
178. 

"THE  WAY,"  Jesus  Christ,  John 
II.,  131-133- 

Meaning  of,  Acts  II.,   2,2,    t^t^, 

34»  347,  362,  423. 

WAY   OF  THE  SOUL,  Numbers, 

WEAKNESS,  Strength  and,  II. 
Corinthians,  342-358. 

WEALTH,  Proverbs,  135-148. 

and  generosity,  Genesis,  118. 

and  woe,  Matthew,  59. 

Highest  good  sought  in,  Eccles- 

iastes,  187-228. 

not  a  proof  of  religious  accept- 
ance. Job,  137. 

Pursuit  of,  Thessalonians,  -j^; 

Pastoral  Epistles,  193-198. 

True,  Proverbs,  356. 

True  use  of,  Luke,  346. 

WEISS,  Bernard,  Thessalonians, 
91;  Pastoral  Epistles,  7,  15; 
James,  2,2,  50,  70,  76,  399. 

WEISSE,  Christian  H.,  Pastoral 
Epistles,  9,  407. 

WEIZSACKER,  C.  von,  II.  Corin 
thians,  320. 

WELLHAUSEN,J.,IsaiahII.,  23S, 
269;  Jeremiah  I.,  371 ;  Ezekiel, 
40(j,  437;  Twelve  Prophets  I., 
128,   147,   160,  225,  246,  J48, 


306 


WESLE  Y—  WILLI  A  MS 


262,  276,  278,  288,  301,  368, 
37o»  371.  380,  410,  411; 
Twelve  Prophets  II..  65.  72, 
87,  III,  123,  133,  153.  156, 
170,  171,  174,  204,  238,246, 
248,  287,  295,  297,  306,  309, 
^22,  362,  380,  472,  485,  487, 
488,  489,  519. 

and    the    death    of   prophecy, 

Deuteronomy,  248. 

on  Cultus,  Numbers,  317. 

on  the  Decalogue,  Deuter- 
onomy, 61-63,  70. 

on  Korah,  Numbers,  199. 

on  the  Passover,  Exodus,  176, 

177;  Leviticus,  450. 

on     slaughter    of    Midianites, 

Numbers,  368. 

on  Theocracy,  Numbers,  6. 

on  Tithes,  Leviticus,  559. 

WESLEY,  Charles,  Acts  II.,  381. 

WESLEY,  John,  Acts  I.,  3,  i37» 
291,  381;  II.,  394;  Romans, 
63;  Ephesians,  241,  2,22;  He- 
brews,   2T,T,. 

WESTCOTT,  B.  F.,  Daniel,  32,92; 
James,  4,  7,  17,  24,  434,  439, 
458;  John  Epistles  vii.,  62,  64, 
104,  148,  166,  170,  184,  190, 
199,  211,  219,  2T^7,  283,  289. 

WESTCOTT  AND  HORT,  II.  Cor- 
inthians, 36,  no,  2-):^,  279, 
301,  31I1  315.  346,  351'  364. 
369;  Galatians,  300;  Ephe- 
sians, 15,  66;  Revelation,  9. 

WETSTEIN,  Johann  Jacob, 
James,  296,  399. 

WHATELY,  Archbishop  Richard, 
Acts  II.,  77,. 

WHIRLWIND,  God  in  the,  I.  Kings, 
433. 


WHITBY,   Daniel,  Hebrews,  248. 
WHITTIER,    John    G.,   Proverbs, 

322. 
WICKED,    Psalms    I..    7,    4547. 

92-94,  310,  330,  345;  II.,  191, 

196. 
WIDOWS,   Pastoral  Epistles,  153- 

155,   158,  163. 
WIEDEMANN,       Alfred,      Ezekiel, 

281,  282. 
WIESELER,    Karl.   Die   Christen- 

verfolgungen      dcr      Caesaj-en, 

Acts  II.,  336;  James,  ^2. 
WIESINGER,  A.,  James,  399,  418. 
WIFE,  The,  Proverbs,  399,  sq. 
and  husband,  Colossians,  2,2^6- 

340;  Peter,  107-118. 
WILBERFORCE,    Wm.,    Acts    I., 

291. 
WILDERNESS,    Discipline  of  the, 

Numbers,  256. 
Israel's  residence  in  the,  Joshua, 

8. 

near  Maan,  Numbers,  245. 

Our  life  in  the,  Numbers,  124, 

258. 
WILL,  and  work.  Phihppians,  137, 
Appeal  to  the,  Deuteronomy, 

100. 
Freedom      of,     Deuteronomy, 

165  ;  Pastoral  Epistles,  40,  41, 

57;  James,  93. 
of  God  our  sanctification,  He- 
brews, 177. 
subject    to   Christ,   Psalms  L, 

14. 
WILLIAMS,  Dr.,  Acts  I.,  134,  135, 

137;  II.,  64. 
WILLIAMS,    Isaac,    James,    444; 

Revelation,     74,      126,      310, 

368. 


WINE—  WORD  S  WOR  TH 


307 


WINE,    Proverbs,    275-28;;   Jcrc 

miah  II.,  50. 

Prohibition  of,  Leviticus,  251. 

Use  of,  I.  Corinthians,  187. 

WISDOM,  as  a  guide  of  conduct, 

Proverbs,  24-36. 

Beginning  of,  Proverbs,  9-23. 

better    than    mirth,   Ecclesias- 

tes,  139. 
The  chief  good  not  in,  Ecclesias- 

tes,  127-133,  230-234. 
Earthly  rewards  of,  Proverbs, 

37-51- 

from  above,  James,  203-213. 

from  below,' James,  191-202. 

Man's,  Psalms  III.,  11. 

Meaning  of.  Proverbs,  10. 

of  God,  Isaiah  I.,  238-242;   I. 

Corinthians,  63-79. 

of  the  past.  Job,  138,  192. 

of  the  serpent,  Ezra,  260. 

Person   of,  Proverbs,  92,  108, 

123. 
Quest  of.  Job,  313;  Proverbs, 

35- 

Rewards  of,  Proverbs,  ^y,  109. 

towards       the     non-Christian 

world,  Colossians,  361-364. 

WISDOM,  The  book.  Proverbs,  9, 
10,  n8;  Song  of  Solomon, 
219;  Hebrews,  42;  James,  69, 
74-76,  287;  Peter,  142;  John 
Epistles,  137. 

WISDOM  LITERATURE,  Prov- 
erbs, 9;  James,  68-75. 

WISE  MEN,  Coming  of  the,  Mat- 
thew, 18-20. 

WITNESS  OF  THE  SPIRIT,  Ro- 
mans, 224. 

WITNESSES,  A  cloud  of,  Hebrews, 
^59-269. 


WITNESSES,  The  two,  RcvdaLi  jn, 

177-188. 
WOLSEY,    Cardinal,     Fall    of,    I. 
Samuel,   32;  II.,  Samuel,  271. 
WOMEN,  Proverbs,  96,  132,  396. 

Attractiveness  of.  Genesis,  58. 

Claim  of.  Numbers,  139,  2>2i^- 

Compromising     their     purity, 

Judges,  403. 

Degradation  of,  Judges,  351. 

despised,      Ecclesiastes,      203, 

225. 

Dress  of.  Pastoral  Epistles,  loi. 

102. 

Good,  Proverbs,  396-410. 

in  Jewish  histor}',  Ezra,  Ji^T^. 

Influence      of.     Genesis,     48; 

Joshua,  158. 

Isaiah     to,     Isaiah     I.,     262- 

287. 

Life  of,  Job,  75. 

of  Corinth,  I.Corinthians,  241- 

257- 

Place  of.  Judges,  417. 

Preaching  of,  Chronicles,  263. 

Social    position    of,    Pastoral 

Epistles,  256. 

suffer    because    of    P>e's    sin, 

Leviticus,  323. 

with  no  vocation.  Judges,  2i72i- 

WOOD,    J.   T.,  Ephesus,  Acts   II., 

281,  362. 
WORD,  of  Christ  indwelling,  Colos- 
sians, 325-328. 

of  God    immutable,    Hebrews, 

63- 

of  God    living,    Hebrews,    63, 

305- 
WORDSWORTH,  Bp.  Christopher, 
Pastoral  Epistles,  134;  James 
Epistles,  2S3. 


308 


WORD S  WOR  TH,  WM.  —  WRA  TH  OF  G OD 


WORDSWORTH,     Wm.,     Ezekiel, 

WORSHIP,  Behavior  in  Christian, 

T^y;  Galatians,  341;  Hebrews, 

Pastoral  Epistles,  94-103. 

222;  John  Epistles,  234. 

Coldness  in,  Luke,  228. 

WORK,    Blessings    of,    Proverbs, 

Daily,  Numbers,  345. 

268. 

Elements  of.  Pastoral  Epistles, 

Dead,  Hebrews,  88. 

82-95. 

Not  all,  Isaiah  H.,  309. 

an    essential    function    of  the 

Shining  and,  PhiHppians,  131- 

Church,  Ezekiel,  498. 

156. 

Fine  places    of,     II.    Samuel, 

WORLD,    The,    better,  Galatians, 

99. 

31- 

Forms  of,  I.  Samuel,  80. 

End  of,  Hebrews,  166. 

Hypocrisy    and,    Psalms    II., 

Harvest  and  vintage  of,  Rev- 

122. 

elation,  245-258. 

Instinct  for.  Exodus,  287. 

Kingdom  of,  Revelation,  190. 

Law  of.  Exodus,  336-338. 

Meaning  of,  James,  229. 

Man's    faculty    for,     Genesis, 

of  Isaiah,  Isaiah,  91-102. 

II. 

Seductions  of,  James,  226-232. 

More  effective  method,  Ecclesi- 

The  term,  Acts  I.,  257. 

astes,  158. 

Vanity  of,  John  Epistles,  149- 

New  Testament  idea  of,  Leviti- 

163. 

cus,  444-446. 

which  we  must  not  love,  John 

of  Israel   centralized,    Deuter- 

Epistles, 136-148. 

onomy,  20,  262-266. 

without  God,  Genesis,  11. 

of  Israehtes,  Numbers,  295. 

WORLDLINESS,   and  the  care  of 

Public,   Pastoral  Epistles,  95, 

God      contradicted.     Genesis, 

100. 

138,  139- 

result  of  revelation,  Hebrews, 

and    its    meaning,    John    II., 

3- 

239-242. 

Ritual,     I.     Samuel,     190;    I. 

Modern,  Judges,  234. 

Kings,  186-192. 

not  a  real  substitute  for  God's 

Simplicity    of,    John    I.,    154; 

promises.  Genesis,  161. 

Philippians,  183. 

not  satisfying.  Genesis,  115. 

Spiritual    gifts    and  public,  I. 

of  Saul,  I.  Samuel,  152. 

Corinthians,  309-324. 

rebuked,   Philippians,  353. 

Temple,  I.  Kings,  193-201. 

WORSHIP,  Aesthetic,  Colossians, 

WORTHLESSNESS,  Proverbs,  84- 

192-193. 

91. 

and  conduct,  James,  320-322. 

WRATH  OF  GOD,  Leviticus,  242; 

and    excitement,    James,   315- 

Isaiah  I.,  47,  55;  Colossians, 

320. 

278-282;    Thessalonians,    62- 

and  music,  James,  320. 

64. 

WRIGHT—  YO  UNG 


WRIGHT,   Arthur,  Composition  of 
the  Four  Gospels,    Thcssaloiii 
ans,  202. 

WRITING,  an  early  accomplish- 
ment, Deuteronomy,  472; 
Judges,  19. 


WRONG,    acknowledged,    Genesis, 

108. 
can  never  be  the  strong,  Judges, 

182. 

ki:;Ii(   and.   rsah.is  I.,  .vq. 

WVCLll'l',  John,  Acts  11.,  ii-j. 


XENOI   TEKMOREIOI,    Societies 

of.  Acts  II.,  364. 
XENOPHANES,  Isaiah  II.,  125. 


XENOPIION,  Isaiah  II.,  iii,  164, 
165,  i6g,  179;  Daniel,  58, 
206,  2 1 6. 


YOUNG,  Dangers  of  the,  Proverbs,    I  YOUNG,      Hopefulness      of     the, 
34.  I         Numbers,   172, 


310 


ZA  CHA  E  US—ZECHA  RIA  H  VII. 


ZACHAEUS,  Proverbs,  367. 
ZECHARIAH,   King  of  Israel,  II. 

Kings,  206. 
ZADOK,    The   priest,   II.   Samuel, 

129,  233;  I.  Kings,  115. 
ZAHN,    Theodor,  James,   21,   70, 

370. 
ZALMUNNA,  Fate  of.  Judges,  192- 

194. 
ZARATHUSTRA,      Deuteronomy, 

473;  Jeremiah  I.,  243. 
ZARED,    The     valley,     Numbers, 

251. 
ZAREPHATH,  See  SAREPTA. 
ZEAL,  Isaiah  I.,  130. 

of  Christ,  Joshua,  198,  199. 

ZEALOTS,  James,  198,  221,  277, 

285;  Peter,  124. 
ZEBAH,  Fate  of.  Judges,  192-194. 
ZEBUL,  Judges,  222. 
ZEBULON  blessed  by  Jacob,  Gene- 
sis, 434. 
ZEBULON,  The  tribe,  Inheritance 

of,  Joshua,  320,  321. 
Moses    abuses,    Deuteronomy, 

468. 
ZECHARIAH,  Son  of  Jehoida,  II. 

Kings,     158-164;    Chronicles, 

408. 
ZECHARIAH,     The     book,     He- 
brews, 115,  122. 
i-viii,  Twelve  Prophets  II.,  253- 

328. 
ix-xiv,    Twelve    Prophets    II., 

447-490. 
Faith  of,  Hebrews,  264. 


ZECHARIAH  I.,  3,  James,  244. 

13,  Romans,  283. 

18,  19,  Daniel,  108. 

ZECHARIAH  II.,  i,  2,  Revelation, 

168. 

4,  5,  Psalms  III.,  315. 

5,  Revelation,  169. 

5-17,  Daniel,  11. 

6-10,  Daniel,  11,  108. 

8,  Galatians,  450. 

10,  II,  Isaiah  II.,  211. 

ZECHARIAH  HI.,    i.   Chronicles, 

290;  Song  of  Solomon,   220; 

Ephesians,    400;  James,  460, 

461. 

2,  Daniel,  180,  181. 

8,  Chronicles,  144;  Isaiah  II., 

280. 

8-10,  Daniel,  11. 

10,  Deuteronomy,  364. 

ZECHARIAH  IV.,  i,  Jeremiah  II., 

340. 

1-14,  Leviticus,  475. 

2-12,  Exodus,  383. 

3,  Jeremiah  I.,  260. 

• 6,    7,     Ezra,    81;     Isaiah    I., 

185. 

7,  Revelation,  141. 

10,   Chronicles,  95,  356;  Dan- 
iel, 191,  325. 
ZECHARIAH  VI.,  1-8,  Daniel,  108. 

II,  13,  Hebrews,  115. 

12,  Hebrews,  122. 

13,  Mark,  446. 

ZECHARIAH  VII.,  3,  Mark,  65. 
5,  6,  Mark,  65. 


ZECHARIAH  VII 

—ZEPHANIAH  I.                  311 

ZECHARIAH    VII.,     14.     Psalms 

ZECHARIAH    XIV.,   8,    Jeremiah 

III.,  146;  Hebrews,   122. 

L.  85. 

16,  Hebrews,  123. 

9,  Peter,  328. 

ZECHARIAH     VIII.,     16,    Fphc- 

16,  Revelation,  128. 

sians,  293. 

20,  E.xodus,  408 ;  Leviticus,  28 ; 

19,  Ezekicl,  207;  Mark,  65. 

Revelation,  256. 

ZECHARIAH  IX.,  8,  II.  Kings,  68. 

21,  Ezra,  loi. 

9,  Daniel,  250;  Matthew,  396. 

ZECHARIAS,  Father  of  John  the 

5,  II.  Kings,  194. 

Baptist,   Benedictus  of,   Luke, 

10,  Psalms  II.,  316. 

28,  42-44. 

ZECHARIAH  X.,  i,  James,  293. 

The  mute  priest,  Luke,  15-28. 

3,  Jeremiah  II.,  301. 

ZEDEKIAH,  last  king  of  Judah, 

10-12,  Revelation,  270. 

Jeremiah  II.,  166. 

ZECHARIAH  XL,  i,  Jeremiah  II., 

captured.    Song    of    Solomon, 

lOI. 

297 ;  Isaiah  II.,  34,  35  ;  Ezekiel, 

1-17,  II,  Kings,  220. 

lOI. 

4-17,  I.  Kings,  280. 

made  king  by  Nebuchadnezzar, 

7-14,  II.  Kings,  219. 

II.    Kings,    437;   Jeremiah   I., 

12,  Matthew,  396,  415. 

46;  II.,  96. 

13,  E.xodus,  345. 

ZEDEKIAH,  The  priest  of  Ahab, 

ZECHARIAH  XII.,  i.  Psalms  III., 

I.  Kings,  488,  493. 

185. 

ZELLER,    Edward,    Acts    of   the 

8-14,   Leviticus,   537;   Chroni- 

Apostles,   Acts    I.,    230,    326; 

cles,  144. 

II.,  vi;  Galatians,  124;  James, 

9,  Peter,   178. 

138. 

10,  Leviticus,  471. 

ZELOPHEHAD,      Daughters     of. 

11-13,    II.    Kings,    408;   Jere- 

Numbers,   331,    406;  Joshua, 

miah  I.,  24. 

309- 

12-14,  I.  Samuel,  92;  I.  Kings, 

ZENAS,    Pastoral    Epistles,     203, 

143- 

208. 

ZECHARIAH  XIIL,    i,  Leviticus, 

ZEPHANIAH,  The  book.   Twelve 

47i»  537- 

Prophets  II.,  35-75. 

2-5,  Jeremiah  II.,  113. 

Date  of.  Twelve  Prophets  II., 

4,  I.  Kings,  361. 

17- 

7,  Matthew,  396;  Mark,   t.'^C^. 

Text   of.   Twclvi-  Prophets  II., 

7-9,  I.  Kings,  280. 

35^  36. 

ZECHARIAH  XIV.,  Leviticus,  470. 

ZEPHANIAH  I.,  I,  II.  Kings,  375. 

1-7,  Daniel,  321. 

2,  3.  Jeremiah  I.,   180. 

5,  11.  Kings,  194;  Daniel,  191; 

4,  II.  Kings,  233.  388;  Twelve 

Twelve  Prophets  I.,  68;  Thes- 

Prophets  II.,   14. 

salonians,  131. 

5,  11.  Kings,  3C1,  390. 

312 


ZEPHANIAH  I.-  ZWI:KA  U  PROPHETS 


ZEPHANIAH  I.,  7,    Jeremiah    I, 

8,  II.  Kings,  427. 

9,  Ezekiel,  428. 

15,  16,  Revelation,  313. 

ZEPHANIAH  II.,  3,  Peter,   7,2^. 

4,  11.  Kings,  194,  375;  Jere- 
miah I.,  14. 

10,  Isaiah  I.,  274. 

12-15,  n.  Kings,  2i7(>- 

ZEPHANIAH  III.,  i-ii,  II.  Kings, 
Z72. 

3,  4,  Jeremiah  II.,  2yy. 

7,  Jeremiah  I.,  127. 

ZEPHATH,  Judges,  25. 

ZERACH,  The  Ethiopian,  defeated 
by  .\sa,  I.  Kings,  323. 

ZERUBBABEL,  Ezra,  6,  40,  84, 
107;  Twelve  Prophets  II., 
298. 

ZIBA  and  Mephibosheth,  II.  Sam- 
uel, 137,  242. 


ZIKLAG,  David  at,  I.  Samuel,  397, 

416-418;  Psalms  I.,  300. 
ZIMRI,  King  of  Israel,   I.   Kings, 

ZION,  The  name,  Song  of  Solo- 
mon, 104. 

ZIPH,  Wilderness  of,  David  in  the, 
I.  Samuel,  359. 

ZIPPOR,  Numbers,  262. 

ZIPPORAH,  wife  of  Moses,  circum- 
cises her  son,  Exodus,  'BiZ. 

ZOAN,  Psalms  II.,  389. 

ZOLA,  M.,  Proverbs,  66. 

ZOPHAR,  first  speech,  Job,  154. 

his  character,  Job,  102. 

no  mere  echo.  Job,  161. 

second  speech.  Job,  242. 

third  speech,  Job,  309. 

ZOPHIM,  Numbers,  299. 

ZOROASTER,  Ecclesiastes,  55. 

ZUPH,  I.  Samuel,  128. 

ZWICKAU  PROPHETS,  Pastoral 
Epistles,  70. 


'"lllllllf  llll  lifffliii  III  in  S'lS  '"'''""" 
1    1012  01231   2445 


